Abstract

Ten strains of aerobic methanotrophic bacteria represented by halophilic neutrophiles or halotolerant alkaliphiles were isolated from saline and alkaline lakes of southeast Siberia, Mongolia, Africa, and North America. Based on analysis of the nucleotide sequences of 16S rRNA gene and the pmoA gene encoding particulate methane monooxygenase, the isolates were classified as Methylomicrobium alcaliphilum, Methylomicrobium buryatense, and Methylobacter marinus. All strains of the genus Methylomicrobium were shown to synthesize glycoprotein S-layers located on the cell surface with hexagonal symmetry (p6) as a monolayer of cup-shaped structures or fine “inverted” conical structures and as plates consisting of protein subunits with inclined (p2) symmetry. During adaptation to the high salinity of the medium, isolated methanotrophs synthesize osmoprotectants: ectoine, sucrose, and glutamate. The ectC gene encoding ectoine synthase (EctC) was identified in six methanotrophic strains. Phylogenetic analysis of translated amino acid sequence of the ectC gene fragment suggests lateral transfer of the genes of ectoine synthesis as the most probable way for methanotrophs to acquire resistance to high external salinity.

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