Abstract

Strains of halophilic archaea, Haloarcula vallismortis and two Haloarcula strains OHF-1 and OHF-2, showed high tolerance to organic solvents at high media NaCl concentrations. For example, the lowest log Pow of the solvent which allowed growth (log Pow is the common logarithm of the partition coefficient of a given solvent in a mixture of n-octanol and water) for H. vallismortis was 5.1 at 20% NaCl and 4.4 at 30% NaCl. The solvent tolerance of Haloarcula argentinensis, on the other hand, was not affected by the NaCl concentration. Cells of strains OHF-1 and OHF-2 were of triangular or irregular morphology but became spherical in cultures in NaCl media overlaid with cyclohexane (log Pow=3.4), but returned to the triangular shape when the organic solvent evaporated from the medium. When cells of strains OHF-1, OHF-2, and H. argentinensis were grown in NaCl media in the presence of n-decane, they contained less phosphatidylglycerol and more phosphatidylglycerosulfate and phosphatidylglycerophosphate methyl ester than when grown without added n-decane. When the solvent was removed from the media after cultivation, the levels of these compounds returned to their initial ones.

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