Abstract

Two halophilic archaeal strains, R30(T) and tADL(T), were isolated from an aquaculture farm in Dailing, China, and from Deep Lake, Antarctica, respectively. Both have rod-shaped cells that lyse in distilled water, stain Gram-negative and form red-pigmented colonies. They are neutrophilic, require >120 g/l NaCl and 48-67 g/l MgCl(2) for growth but differ in their optimum growth temperatures (30 °C, tADL(T) vs. 40 °C, R30(T)). The major polar lipids were typical for members of the Archaea but also included a major glycolipid chromatographically identical to sulfated mannosyl glucosyl diether (S-DGD-1). The 16S rRNA gene sequences of the two strains are 97.4 % identical, show most similarity to genes of the family Halobacteriaceae, and cluster together as a distinct clade in phylogenetic tree reconstructions. The rpoB' gene similarity between strains R30(T) and tADL(T) is 92.9 % and less to other halobacteria. Their DNA G + C contents are 62.4-62.9 mol % but DNA-DNA hybridization gives a relatedness of only 44 %. Based on phenotypic, chemotaxonomic and phylogenetic properties, we describe two new species of a novel genus, represented by strain R30(T) (= CGMCC 1.10593(T) = JCM 17270(T)) and strain tADL(T) (= JCM 15066(T) = DSMZ 22187(T)) for which we propose the names Halohasta litorea gen. nov., sp. nov. and Halohasta litchfieldiae sp. nov., respectively.

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