Inorganic polyphosphates in extremophiles and their possible functions

Autor: Claudio A. Navarro, Carlos A. Jerez, Matías Rivero, Alvaro Orell, Juan S. Aguilar
Rok vydání: 2012
Předmět:
Zdroj: EXTREMOPHILES
Artículos CONICYT
CONICYT Chile
instacron:CONICYT
ISSN: 1433-4909
1431-0651
DOI: 10.1007/s00792-012-0457-9
Popis: Many extremophilic microorganisms are polyextremophiles, being confronted with more than one stress condition. For instance, some thermoacidophilic microorganisms are in addition capable to resist very high metal concentrations. Most likely, they have developed special adaptations to thrive in their living environments. Inorganic polyphosphate (polyP) is a molecule considered to be primitive in its origin and ubiquitous in nature. It has many roles besides being a reservoir for inorganic phosphate and energy. Of special interest are those functions related to survival under stressing conditions in all kinds of cells. PolyP may therefore have a fundamental part in extremophilic microorganism's endurance. Evidence for a role of polyP in the continued existence under acidic conditions, high concentrations of toxic heavy metals and elevated salt concentrations are reviewed in the present work. Actual evidence suggests that polyP may provide mechanistic alternatives in tuning microbial fitness for the adaptation under stressful environmental situations and may be of crucial relevance amongst extremophiles. The enzymes involved in polyP metabolism show structure conservation amongst bacteria and archaea. However, the lack of a canonical polyP synthase in Crenarchaea, which greatly accumulate polyP, strongly suggests that in this phylum a different enzyme may be in charge of its synthesis.
Databáze: OpenAIRE