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Antagonistic interactions between stress factors during the growth of microorganisms under conditions simulating the parameters of their natural ecotopes

Two stress factors, hypoxia (microaerobic conditions) and a high salt concentration, if applied simultaneously to aerobic microorganisms, display an antagonistic mode of interaction. As a result, the NaCl level that is usually optimal for moderate halophiles (5-6%) becomes optimal for the growth of...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Microbiology (New York) 2002-03, Vol.71 (2), p.133-138
Main Authors: ARZUMANYAN, V. G, VORONINA, N. A, GEIDEBREKHT, O. V, SHELEMEKH, O. V, PLAKUNOV, V. K, BELYAEV, S. S
Format: Article
Language:eng ; rus
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Summary:Two stress factors, hypoxia (microaerobic conditions) and a high salt concentration, if applied simultaneously to aerobic microorganisms, display an antagonistic mode of interaction. As a result, the NaCl level that is usually optimal for moderate halophiles (5-6%) becomes optimal for the growth of weak halophiles (Rhodococcus erythropolis and Shewanella sp. CN32); the halotolerant yeast Yarrowia lypolytica acquires halophilic properties (with a growth optimum at a NaCl concentration of 10%), and the growth rate of the extremely halophilic Halobacterium salinarum increases at supraoptimal salt concentrations (25-34%). This phenomenon is apparently due to multiple changes in metabolic reactions. In particular, high salt concentrations suppress respiration and the formation of enzymes (superoxide dismutase and catalase) that protect the cell from toxic oxygen species. Therefore, establishment of microaerobic conditions compensates for the loss of these protective mechanisms and enables cell growth at higher salt concentrations than under aerobic conditions. Of some importance can also be the increase in the intracellular concentrations of osmoprotectants caused by the suppression of their intracellular oxidation. The implications of this phenomenon for the ecophysiology of microorganisms (including oil-oxidizing species) and for the classification of weak and moderate halophiles are discussed.
ISSN:0026-2617
0026-3656
1608-3237
DOI:10.1023/A:1015177616692