Abstract

BackgroundThalassosaline waters produced by the concentration of seawater are widespread and common extreme aquatic habitats. Their salinity varies from that of sea water (ca. 3.5%) to saturation for NaCl (ca. 37%). Obviously the microbiota varies dramatically throughout this range. Recent metagenomic analysis of intermediate salinity waters (19%) indicated the presence of an abundant and yet undescribed gamma-proteobacterium. Two strains belonging to this group have been isolated from saltern ponds of intermediate salinity in two Spanish salterns and were named “Spiribacter”.ResultsThe genomes of two isolates of “Spiribacter” have been fully sequenced and assembled. The analysis of metagenomic datasets indicates that microbes of this genus are widespread worldwide in medium salinity habitats representing the first ecologically defined moderate halophile. The genomes indicate that the two isolates belong to different species within the same genus. Both genomes are streamlined with high coding densities, have few regulatory mechanisms and no motility or chemotactic behavior. Metabolically they are heterotrophs with a subgroup II xanthorhodopsin as an additional energy source when light is available.ConclusionsThis is the first bacterium that has been proven by culture independent approaches to be prevalent in hypersaline habitats of intermediate salinity (half a way between the sea and NaCl saturation). Predictions from the proteome and analysis of transporter genes, together with a complete ectoine biosynthesis gene cluster are consistent with these microbes having the salt-out-organic-compatible solutes type of osmoregulation. All these features are also consistent with a well-adapted fully planktonic microbe while other halophiles with more complex genomes such as Salinibacter ruber might have particle associated microniches.

Highlights

  • Thalassosaline waters produced by the concentration of seawater are widespread and common extreme aquatic habitats

  • By 16S rRNA sequencing they were tentatively assigned to a new genus “Spiribacter” and two separate species “Spiribacter salinus” M19-40 and “Spiribacter” sp

  • The results described in Additional file 1: Figure S3 indicate that they are found worldwide and always in intermediate salinity hypersaline waters

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Summary

Introduction

Thalassosaline waters produced by the concentration of seawater are widespread and common extreme aquatic habitats. Their salinity varies from that of sea water Recent metagenomic analysis of intermediate salinity waters (19%) indicated the presence of an abundant and yet undescribed gamma-proteobacterium. A new group of extremely small archaea (the Nanohaloarchaea) were discovered by metagenomic approaches to be relatively abundant in saturated brines, but no culture of these microbes is yet available [12,13,14,15]. The few studies carried out by PCR and cloning of 16S rRNA [9] had already indicated the presence of bacteria distantly related to Nitrococcus mobilis. Of the metagenome allowed to reconstitute large genomic fragments and indicated that this was a new microbe (or group of microbes) distantly related of the previously mentioned

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