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FEMS Microbiology Reviews 39 (1986) 23-29 Published by Elsevier 23 FER 00023 The ecology and taxonomy of anaerobic halophilic eubacteria (Anaerobic; halophilic; Dead Sea; Halobacteroides; Haloanaerobiaceae) Aharon Oren Division of Microbial and Molecular Ecology, Institute of Life Sciences, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem 91904, Israel Received 13 March 1986 Accepted 17 March 1986 1. SUMMARY A number of obligately anaerobic chemoorganotrophic moderately haloEhilic bacteria have been isolated from the bottom sediments of the Dead Sea and the Great Salt Lake, Utah: (1) Halobacteroides halobius, a long motile rod from the Dead Sea, fermenting sugars to ethanol, acetate, H 2 and CO2; (2) Clostridium lortetii, a rod-shaped bacterium from the Dead Sea, producing endospores with attached gas vacuoles; (3) a spore-forming motile rod-shaped bacterium, fermenting sugars, isolated from the Dead Sea; (4) Haloanaerobium praevalens, isolated from the Great Salt Lake, fermenting carbohydrates, peptides, amino acids and pectin to acetate, propionate, butyrate, H 2 and CO 2. Analysis of their 16S rRNA shows that these organisms are related to each other, but unrelated to any of the other subgroups of the eubacterial kingdom, to which they belong. Ha. praeoalens and Hb. halobius regulate their internal osmotic pressure by the accumulation of salt (Na +, K +, CI-) rather than by organic osmotic solutes. 2. INTRODUCTION Most of our knowledge about halophilic microorganisms and the mechanisms of haloadaptation is based on studies with aerobic organisms. Aerobic halophilic bacteria (e.g., the genus Halobacterium), cyanobacteria, and unicellular green algae (Dunaiiella) are commonly found in hypersaline environments such as salterns, the Great Salt Lake or the Dead Sea. However, the sediments of hypersaline water bodies are generally anaerobic, partly as a result of biological activity in the sediment and the overlying water, and also because of the limited solubility of oxygen in hypersaline brines. The biology of the anaerobic hypersaline environments has been relatively little studied, even though the first bacteria ever isolated from a hypersaline environment were anaerobic clostridia, though not halophilic ones, causing tetanus and gas gangrene, isolated by Lortet from Dead Sea mud towards the end of the 19th century [1]. In this paper I will review our knowledge on the nature of those bacteria (especially eubacteria), able to grow in anaerobic hypersaline environments, their ecology, their taxonomic relationships and their mode of haloadaptation. The archaebacterial genus Halobacterium, though typically consisting of aerobic bacteria, contains a number of strains capable of anaerobic life, using different modes of energy generation in the absence of oxygen: (1) light can serve as an energy source for anaerobic growth in bacteriorhodopsin-containing strains [2] (on the condition 0168-6445/86/$03.50 © 1986 Federation of European Microbiological Societies 24 that retinal is supplied, as its synthesis is oxygen-dependent); (2) in certain strains, nitrate can serve as an alternative electron acceptor in respiration; (3) at least some strains can use arginine as energy source for fermentation [2]; (4) Halobacterium vallismortis has been described as a facultative anaerobe [3], but its mode of energy generation in the absence of oxygen has not been elucidated. It is unknown whether these modes of anaerobic life in halobacteria are of ecological importance. Likewise, we do not know if the moderately halophilic eubacterium Vibrio costicola, which is a facultative anaerobe, grows anaerobically in nature. Obligately anaerobic photosynthetic bacteria of the genus Ectothiorhodospira are common in al- i Fig. 1. Anaerobic halophilic bacteria. (A) Hb. halobius (B) C. lortetii. (C) Strain DY-1 (young cells). (D) Strain DY-1 (sporulating cell). (E) Ha. praevalens. Phase-contrast micrographs. 25 kaline hypersaline lakes of the Wadi Natrun (Egypt) [4] and Kenya. 3. ANAEROBIC HALOPHILIC BACTERIA FROM THE BOTTOM SEDIMENTS OF THE DEAD SEA Our interest in anaerobic halophilic bacteria originated during a systematic survey of the biology of the Dead Sea. Until 1979, the northern basin of the lake was 'permanently' stratified [5], with an upper aerobic layer 40-80 m deep, separated by a thermocline and pycnocline from the deeper brines. This lower water mass (down to a maximal depth of 320 m) was anaerobic, as were the bottom sediments. Anaerobic halophilic bacteria were recovered from these sediments as early as 1943 [6], but unfortunately these early isolates have not been preserved. In February 1979, an overturn of the lake's water column caused a complete mixing, and oxygen penetrated down to the bottom. However, even today the deeper layers of the bottom sediments remain anaerobic. The lower water mass that existed before 1979 contained between 0.23 and 0.56 mg of H2S per 1, which was relatively enriched with light isotopes of sulphur, indicating a possible involvement of biological sulphate reduction in its formation [7]. All our attempts to isolate the organism(s) responsible for this sulphate reduction remained unsuccessful; instead, these sediments yielded 3 novel obligately anaerobic, moderately halophilic bacteria. (1) A very long, slender rod-shaped Gramnegative bacterium (Fig. 1A), motile by means of peritrichous flagella, described as Haiobacteroides halobius gen.nov., sp.nov. [8]. The type strain, ATCC35273, was isolated from an enrichment culture containing 80% Dead Sea water, pyruvate, and yeast extract. It grows with doubling times as short as 55 rain under optimal conditions (41°C, 1.5 M NaC1). The strain requires NaCI concentrations between 1.4 and 2.8 M, tolerates MgC12 concentrations of up to 1.5 M (in addition to 1.5 M NaCI), and grows best at 37-42°C. (2) A rod-shaped Gram-negative bacterium, motile by means of peritrichous flagella, and producing terminal endospores with attached gas vacuoles (Fig. 1B), described as Clostridium lortetii sp.nov. [9]. The type strain, ATCC35059, was isolated from an enrichment culture containing 80% Dead Sea water, lactate and yeast extract. It requires NaC1 concentrations between 1 and 2 M and the optimum growth temperature is 37-45°C. (3) A rod-shaped Gram-negative bacterium, motile by means of peritrichous flagella (Fig. 1C), and sometimes seen to produce terminal endospores, but without gas vacuoles (Fig. 1D). The strain was designated as DY-1. Minimal doubling times were as short as 40 min, in media containing between 0.5 and 2 M NaCI, and at 36-45°C (Oren, unpublished results). 4. OTHER ANAEROBIC CHEMOORGANOTROPHIC HALOPHILIC ISOLATES A non-motile, rod-shaped, obligately anaerobic halophile was isolated by Zeikus and co-workers from bottom sediments in the south arm of the Great Salt Lake, Utah (Fig. 1E). The organism was described as Haloanaerobium praevalens gen.nov., sp.nov. [10], the type strain being deposited as DSM2228. The bacterium may be identical to 'Bacteroides halosmophilus' isolated by Baumgartner in 1937 from salted anchovies and solar salt [11], but which has been lost. Ha. praevalens is Gram-negative, grows best in NaC1 concentrations between 1 and 4 M, and at temperatures of 25-45°C. 5. DISTRIBUTION AND ECOLOGY OF ANAEROBIC HALOPHILIC EUBACTERIA Anaerobic sediments of hypersaline water bodies are often characterised by very high organic matter contents, thus an abundant development of anaerobic halophiles may be expected. However, surprisingly few data are available on the distribution of anaerobic halophilic bacteria and on their in situ activities. In anaerobic sediments from the bottom and shores of the Dead Sea, long, rod-shaped bacteria 26 of the type Hb. halobius are quite abundant. By means of serial dilutions in growth medium we estimated 103-10 5 viable cells per g sediment [8]. N o quantitative data are available on the abundance of C. lortetii. Its possession of gas vacuoles may be of interest from an ecological point of view. Russian scientists, who have isolated similar (but non-halophilic) clostridia with gas vacuoles attached to the endospores, have speculated that the gas vacuoles provide the endospores (which are oxygen-resistant) with a means of dispersion by flotation [12]. Whether this theory is relevant in the case of the Dead Sea bacteria seems doubtful. In laboratory cultures, vacuolated endospores never displayed buoyancy; moreover, our strain of C. lortetii was isolated from sediment at a depth of 60 m, at which the pressure-sensitive gas vesicles would have been collapsed. N o data are available on the abundance of sporulating anaerobes resembling strain DY-1. Morphological types like those shown in Fig. 1D m a y be widespread in anaerobic sediments throughout the world: similar cells were observed in anaerobic mud from Australia, containing 21% NaCI (F.J. Post, Utah State University, Logan, personal communication). Ha. praevalens is present in Great Salt Lake sediments in extremely high numbers: in sediments from the south arm of the lake more than 10 8 cells per ml were counted [10,13]. These sediments demonstrate high rates of microbial decomposition of compounds such as acetate, glucose, lactate, methanol, methylmercaptan, and methionine (last 3 compounds yielding methane as a product) [13]. The anaerobic hypersaline brines of the Orca basin in the Gulf of Mexico, whose NaC1 concentrations exceed 5 M below a depth of 2260 m, show high bacterial counts (1.44-2.9 × 10 5 cells/ml), a high ATP content, and high rates of uridine uptake and breakdown and uptake of acetate [14]. No further characterisation of the bacteria present has been reported. 6. N U T R I T I O N A N D F E R M E N T A T I O N PATTERNS OF ANAEROBIC HALOPHILIC CHEMOORGANOTROPHIC EUBACTERIA The four isolates of obligately anaerobic halophilic bacteria described above are all chemoorganotrophs, generating energy by means of fermentation. Minimal media that support growth of Hb. halobius and strain DY-1 are simple: in addition to inorganic salts they should contain a suitable carbon and energy source (e.g., glucose), L-leucine, L-cystein (as reducing agent) and vitamins; DY-1 requires biotin, and Hb. halobius requires biotin and p-aminobenzoate [8]. C. lortetii probably has complex nutritional requirements, and the minimal requirements of Ha. praevalens have not been reported. Hb. halobius and strain DY-1 ferment carbohydrates: both utilise glucose, fructose, sucrose and starch as carbon and energy source [8]. Hb. halobius in addition used galactose and pyruvate. C. lortetii grows in a rich medium containing L-glutamate, yeast extract, casamino acids and nutrient broth [9], but how m a n y of these ingredients are actually required remains to be de- Table 1 Fermentation products of anaerobic halophilic bacteria a Amounts (mmol) are given relative to acetate ( = 100). Acetate Propionate 100 15 36 Isobutyrate nbutyrate Isovalerate Ethanol Formate CO2 H2 65 15 180 194 N.D. 60 35 200 136 N.D. 110 Ha. praevalens no glucose + glucose Hb. halobius C. lortetii Strain DY-1 100 100 100 100 38 152 226 6 2 7 7 3 a Data are derived from [8-10] and unpublished results. N.D., not determined. 77 27 termined. The addition of glucose to this medium stimulates growth, but glucose is udlised only at the end of the exponential growth phase, probably after other, more favorable substrates have been depleted [9]. The Great Salt Lake isolate Ha. praevalens ferments carbohydrates, peptides, amino acids and pectin [10]. Fermentation products of the 4 isolates include acetate, ethanol, hydrogen, CO 2 and others (Table 1). 7. THE TAXONOMIC POSITION OF ANAEROBIC H A L O P H I L I C C H E M O O R G A N O TROPHIC EUBACTERIA The four anaerobic halophilie bacteria described all stain Gram-negative. The Gram-negative character of their cell envelope has been continued by means of electron microscopy in the case of Hb. halobius [8]., Ha. praeoalens [10] and C. lortetii [9]. The Gram-negative character of the cell envelope of C. lortetii may preclude its classification in the genus Clostridium; also, data on the structure of the 16S ribosomal RNA do not suggest that C. lortetii is closely related to the nonhalophilic clostridia (see below). The four anaerobic halophiles share a low percentage of guanine plus cytosine in their DNA: Ha. praeoalens has 27 mol % [10], strain DY-1 has 29.6 mol % (Oren, unpublished results); Hb. halobius has 30.7 mol % [8]; and C. lortetii has 31.5 mol % [9]. 0.3 0.4 0.5 $AB Anaerobic halophile DY.1 I ~[~ I t . . . . . . . ~lostridium Ior(etii ATCC 35059 Halobacteroides halobius ATCC 35273 . Haloanaero ~J~ll~ oraevalens OSH 2228 Fig. 2. Dendrogram showing the phylogenetic position of 4 anaerobic halophific eubacteria, based on their 16S rRNA oligonucleotide similarity coefficients (SAB) [15]: Comparative 16S oligonucleotide cataloguing [15] showed that Ha. praeoalens and Hb. halobius obviously belong to the eubacterial kingdom, but do not show any clear relationship with any of the recognised subgroups within the eubacteria [16], except possibly with the spirochaetes [17]. Moreover, the two halophilic anaerobes are related to each other [16], and a new family, the Haloanaerobiaceae, has been proposed for these novel organisms. The isolates C. iortetii and DY-1 also belong to this group (Fig. 2). 8. OSMOREGULATION IN ANAEROBIC HALOPHILIC C H E M O O R G A N O T R O P H I C EUBACTERIA Halophilic andhalotolerant microorganisms can be divided into two groups with respect to their mode of osmoregulation. The extremely halophilic archaebacteria ( Halobacterium, Halococcus ) contain high intracellular salt concentrations (mainly KC1), roughly iso-osmotic with the external salt solution. Halophilic unicellular green algae and halophilic cyanobacteria accumulate different organic osmotic solutes in their cytoplasm (glycerol, carbohydrates, betaine), and betaine is the main osmotic solute in halophilic eubacteria [18]. Ha. praeoalens and Hb. halobius [19] both contain high internal Na ÷, K ÷ and C1- concentrations, approximately balancing the osmotic pressure of the cytoplasm with that of the external medium. No significant concentrations of organic molecules known as osmotic solutes in other microorganisms such as polyols, betaine and different amino acids could be demonstrated in the anaerobic halophiles. The aerobic halophilic archaebacteria (Halobacterium, Halococcus) which balance their intracellular osmotic pressure by accumulating salts, possess special adaptations enabling their enzymes to be stable and active in the presence of high salt concentrations: the proteins have a high content of acidic amino acids, and are relatively poor in basic and hydrophobic amino acids. Such proteins not only function in the presence of high salt concentrations, but they even require them for stability and activity. The proteins from the 28 anaerobic halophilic eubacteria Hb. halobius, Ha. praevalens and C. lortetii also contain an excess of acidic amino acids, and a low content of basic and hydrophobic amino acids [19]. Thus, their mode of haloadaptation resembles that of the extremely halophilic aerobic archaebacteria, rather than that of the moderately halophilic aerobic eubacteria. This paper is based on studies supported by grants from the Israeli Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure, the Houston Lighting and Power Company, Dynatech R / D Company, USPH grant No. AI 12277, and NSF grant DEB-8107061. REFERENCES 9. FINAL CONCLUSIONS It is becoming increasingly clear that even such extreme environments as the anaerobic sediments of hypersaline water bodies are inhabited by a variety of microorganisms. A number of fermentative obligate anaerobes have now been isolated and characterised. However, not all types of anaerobic halophiles are known, since biological sulphate reduction occurs in many anaerobic hypersaline habitats (such as the Dead Sea [7], and the Solar Lake in Sinai, in which the deeper layers (salinity 18%) are characterised by high sulphide concentrations [20]), but no extremely halophilic sulphate-reducing bacteria have been described. The most salt-tolerant isolate we know of is a strain which tolerates 10-17% NaC1 [21], isolated by Triiper from the transition zone near the Atlantis II hot brine in the Red Sea. The recent discovery of halophilic methanogenic bacteria suggests that even at salinities approaching saturation, complete anaerobic degradation of organic compounds may be possible; this involves the participation of a variety of bacteria--polymer degraders, fermenters, sulfate reducers and methanogens. The microbiology of such environments has not yet been studied thoroughly, and there is no doubt that a wealth of novel and interesting microorganisms await discovery. Their isolation and characterisation should complete our understanding of the ecology of hypersaline water bodies. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I thank M. Kessel, B.J. Paster, M. Shilo, L. Vlodavsky, W.R. Weisburg and C.R. Woese, who all contributed to the data presented in this review. [1] Lortet, M.L. (1892) Researches on the pathogenic microbes of the mud of the Dead Sea. Palest. Expl. Fund., 48-50. [2] Hartmann, R., Sickinger, H.-D. and Oesterhelt, D. (1980) Anaerobic growth of halobacteria. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 77, 3821-3825. [3] Gonzalez, C., Gutierriez, C. and Ramirez, C. (1978) Halobacterium oallismortis sp.nov., an amylolytic and carbohydrate-metabolizing, extremely halophilic bacterium. Can. J. Microbiol. 24, 710-715. [4] Imhoff, J.F., Hashwa, F. and Triiper, H.G. (1978) Isolation of extremely halophilic phototrophic bacteria from the alkaline Wadi Natrun, Egypt. Arch. Hydrobiol. 84, 381-388. [5] Steinhorn, 1., Assaf, G., Gat, J.R., Nishry, A., Nissenbaum, A., Stiller, M., Beyth, M., Neev, D., Garber, R., Friedman, G.M. and Weiss, W. (1979) The Dead Sea: deepening of the mixolimnion signifies the overture to overturn of the water column. Science 206, 55-57. [6] Elazari-Volcani, B. (1943) Bacteria in the bottom sediments of the Dead Sea. Nature 152, 274-275. [7] Nissenbaum, A. and Kaplan, I.R. (1976) Sulfur and carbon isotopic evidence for biogeochemical processes in the Dead Sea ecosystem, in Environmental Biogeochemistry, Vol. 1 (Nriagu, J.O., Ed.) pp. 309-325. Ann Arbor Science Publishers, Ann Arbor, MI. [8] Oren, A., Weisburg, W.G., Kessel, M. and Woese, C.R. (1984) Halobacteroides halobius gen.nov., sp.nov., a moderately halophilic anaerobic bacterium from the bottom sediments of the Dead Sea. Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 5, 58-70. [9] Oren, A. (1983) Clostridium lortetii sp.nov., a halophilic obligatory anaerobic bacterium producing endospores with attached gas vacuoles. Arch. Microbiol. 136, 42-48. [10] Zeikus, J.G., Hegge, P.W., Thompson, T.E., Phelps, T.J. and Langworthy, T.A. (1983) Isolation and description of Haloanaerobium praeoalens gen.nov, and sp.nov., an obligately anaerobic halophile common to Great Salt Lake sediments. Curr. Microbiol. 9, 225-234. [11] Baumgartner, J.G. (1937) The salt limits and thermal stability of a new species of anaerobic halophile. Food Res. 2, 321-329. [12] Duda, V.I. and Makar'eva, E.D. (1978) Morphogenesis and function of gas caps on spores of anaerobic bacteria of the genus Clostridium. Mikrobiologiya 46, 563-569. [13] Zeikus, J.G. (1983) Metabolic communication between biodegradative populations in nature, in Microbes in Their 29 Natural Environments. Symposium 34, Society for General Microbiology (Slater, J.H., Whittenbury, R. and Wimpenny, J.W.T., Eds.) pp. 423-462. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. [14] LaRock, P.A., Lauer, R.D., Sehwarz, J.R., Watanabe, K.K. and Wiesenburg, D.A. (1979) Microbial biomass and activity distribution in an anoxic, hypersaline basin. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 37, 466-470. [15] Fox, G.E., Pechman, K.R. and Woese, C.R. (1977) Comparative cataloging of 16S ribosomal rihonucleic acid: molecular approach to prokaryotic systematics. Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. 27, 44-57. [16] Oren, A., Paster, B.J. and Woese, C.R. (1984) Haloanaerobiaceae: a new family of moderately halophilic, obligatory anaerobic bacteria. Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 5, 71-80. [17] Paster, B.J., Stackebrandt, E., Hespell, R.B., Hahn, C.M. [18] [19] [20] [21] and Woese, C.R. (1984) The phylogeny of the spirochetes. Syst. Appl. Microbiol. 5, 337-351. Imhoff, J.F. and Rodriguez-Valera, F. (1984) Betaine is the main compatible solute of halophilic eubacteria. J. Bacteriol. 160, 478-479. Oren, A. (1986) Intracellular salt concentrations of the anaerobic halophihc eubacteria Haloanaerobium praevalens and Halobacteroides halobius. Can. J. Microbioi, in press. Jorgensen, B.B., Kuenen, J.G. and Cohen, Y. (1979) Microbial transformations of sulfur compounds in a stratified lake (Solar Lake, Sinai). Limnol. Oceanogr. 24, 799-822. T~per, H.G. (1969) Bacterial sulfate reduction in the Red Sea hot brines, in Hot Brines and Recent Heavy Metal Deposits in the Red Sea (Degens, E.T. and Ross, D.A., Eds.) pp. 263-271. Springer, New York.