School of Natural Sciences, Brambell Building, Deiniol Road, Bangor LL57 2UW, UK.
Fundación Ciencia y Vida, Avenida Zañartu 1482 , Of. 236/4, Ñuñoa, 7780272 Santiago, Chile.
Curr Issues Mol Biol. 2020;39:63-76. doi: 10.21775/cimb.039.063. Epub 2020 Feb 21.
The study of extreme acidophiles, broadly defined as microorganisms that grow optimally at pH values below 3, was initiated by the discovery by Waksman and Joffe in the early 1900s of a bacterium that was able to live in the dilute sulfuric acid it generated by oxidizing elemental sulfur. The number of known acidophiles remained relatively small until the second half of the 20th century, but since then has greatly expanded to include representatives of living organisms from within all three domains of life on earth, and notably within many of the major divisions and phyla of Bacteria and Archaea. Environments that are naturally acidic are found throughout the world, and others that are man-made (principally from mining metals and coal) are also widely distributed. These continue to be sites for isolating new species, (and sometimes new genera) which thrive in acidic liquor solutions that contain concentrations of metals and metalloids that are lethal to most life forms. The development and application of molecular techniques and, more recently, next generation sequencing technologies has, as with other areas of biology, revolutionized the study of acidophile microbiology. Not only have these studies provided greater understanding of the diversity of organisms present in extreme acidic environments and aided in the discovery of largely overlooked taxa (such as the ultra-small uncultivated archaea), but have also helped uncover some of the unique adaptations of life forms that live in extremely acidic environments. Thanks to the relatively low biological complexity of these ecosystems, systems-level spatio-temporal studies of model communities have been achieved, laying the foundations for 'multi-omic' exploration of other ecosystems. This article introduces the subject of acidophile microbiology, tracing its origins to the current status quo, and provides the reader with general information which provides a backdrop to the more specific topics described in Quatrini and Johnson (2016).
极端嗜酸菌的研究,广义上定义为在 pH 值低于 3 时最佳生长的微生物,始于 20 世纪初 Waksman 和 Joffe 的发现,他们发现了一种能够在其通过氧化元素硫产生的稀硫酸中生存的细菌。直到 20 世纪下半叶,已知的嗜酸菌数量仍然相对较少,但此后,它们大大扩展,包括来自地球上所有三个生命领域的生物代表,特别是在细菌和古菌的许多主要类群和门中。在世界各地都有天然酸性的环境,而其他人为酸性的环境(主要来自采矿金属和煤炭)也广泛分布。这些环境仍然是分离新物种的场所,(有时还有新属),这些物种在含有金属和类金属浓度对大多数生命形式致命的酸性液体中茁壮成长。分子技术的发展和应用,以及最近的下一代测序技术,与生物学的其他领域一样,彻底改变了嗜酸微生物学的研究。这些研究不仅提供了对极端酸性环境中存在的生物多样性的更深入了解,并有助于发现被忽视的类群(如超小型未培养古菌),而且还帮助揭示了生活在极端酸性环境中的生命形式的一些独特适应。由于这些生态系统的生物复杂性相对较低,已经实现了模型群落的系统水平时空研究,为其他生态系统的“多组学”探索奠定了基础。本文介绍了嗜酸微生物学的主题,追溯其起源到当前的现状,并为读者提供了一般信息,为 Quatrini 和 Johnson(2016)中描述的更具体主题提供了背景。