Natronococcus roseus

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Classification & Phylogeny

Natronococcus Phylogeny

Domain: Archaea

Kingdom: Euryarchaeota

Phylum: Euryarchaeota

Class: Halobacteria

Order: Halobacteriales

Family: Halobacteriaceae Genus: Natronococcus Species: Natronococcus roseus


The strain was closely related to Natronococcus amylolyticus, Natronococcus jeotgali, & Natronococcus occultus, sharing 98.4%, 96.2%, and 95.7% 16S rRNA sequence respectively.[1][4]


Description & Significance

Natronococcus Occultus

The bacterium was isolated from Lake Chagannor in Inner Mongolia, China. The colonies were pink with color intensity decreasing when the cells grew at salt saturation levels.[1][4]

The bacterium was found in irregular clusters, pairs, and single cells. N. roseus is non-motile, cocci, gram-variable, obligate aerobe, and reduces nitrate to nitrite. Optimal growth range is between 8% and 30% NaCl, at a pH range of 8.5-11 (prefers 9.5), and a temperature range of 20-50°C (optimum at 40 °C).[1][4]

Notably the lack of the phospholipid, PL2, sets it apart from it's relative Natronococcus occultus. It's lipids contain derivatives of phosphatidylglycerol (PG), phosphatidylglycerol phosphate methyl ester (PGP-Me) and minor phospholipid components. No glycolipids were detected. [1][4]

The bacterium is susceptible to novobiocin (10 µg), bacitracin (10 µg), anisomycin (5 µg), erythromycin (15 µg) and streptomycin (10 µg); resistant to rifampicin (5 µg), ampicillin (10 µg), neomycin (30 µg), chloramphenicol (30 µg) and nalidixic acid (30 µg).[1][4]

Metabolism

Natronococcus uses glucose, lactose, sucrose, d-fructose, maltose, d-mannitol, sorbitol, glutamate, acetate, lactate, propionate, pyruvate, and succinate. For carbon and energy however, it does not use galacose, sobose, arabinose, and rhamnose. The bacterium uses the amino acids serine, threonine, glycine, asparagine and lysine.Natronococcus reduces nitrate to nitrite as is common amongst halophiles.[1][4]


Genomic Content

The strain has a G+C content ratio of 62.1 mol%, while the minor component has a content of 55.7 mol%. Th value falls within range for the Natronococcus genus.[1][4]


Reproduction

Natronococcus like all archaea reproduces asexually.[3]


Ecology

Natronococcus is a chemooganotrophic bacterium thus far only isolated from Lake Chagannor.

References

(1.) Corral P, Gutierrez MC, Castillo AM, Dominguez M, Lopalco P, Corcelli A, Ventosa A. 2013. Natronococcus roseus sp nov., a haloalkaliphilic archaeon from a hypersaline lake. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 63:104-108.


(2.) H.N.M.Ross 2012, posting date. Electron micrograph of Natronococcus occultus. [Online.]


(3.) Krieg N. 2005. p. 21-22, Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. US: Springer.


(4.) Tindall BJ, Ross HNM, Grant WD. 1984. NATRONOBACTERIUM GEN-NOV AND NATRONOCOCCUS GEN-NOV, 2 NEW GENERA OF HALOALKALIPHILIC ARCHAEBACTERIA. Systematic and Applied Microbiology 5:41-57.