Abstract

The cellular adjustment of Bacteria and Archaea to high-salinity habitats is well studied and has generally been classified into one of two strategies. These are to accumulate high levels either of ions (the “salt-in” strategy) or of physiologically compliant organic osmolytes, the compatible solutes (the “salt-out” strategy). Halophilic protists are ecophysiological important inhabitants of salt-stressed ecosystems because they are not only very abundant but also represent the majority of eukaryotic lineages in nature. However, their cellular osmostress responses have been largely neglected. Recent reports have now shed new light on this issue using the geographically widely distributed halophilic heterotrophic protists Halocafeteria seosinensis, Pharyngomonas kirbyi, and Schmidingerothrix salinarum as model systems. Different approaches led to the joint conclusion that these unicellular Eukarya use the salt-out strategy to cope successfully with the persistent high salinity in their habitat. They accumulate various compatible solutes, e.g., glycine betaine, myo-inositol, and ectoines. The finding of intron-containing biosynthetic genes for ectoine and hydroxyectoine, their salt stress–responsive transcription in H. seosinensis, and the production of ectoine and its import by S. salinarum come as a considerable surprise because ectoines have thus far been considered exclusive prokaryotic compatible solutes. Phylogenetic considerations of the ectoine/hydroxyectoine biosynthetic genes of H. seosinensis suggest that they have been acquired via lateral gene transfer by these bacterivorous Eukarya from ectoine/hydroxyectoine-producing food bacteria that populate the same habitat.

Highlights

  • The invention of a semipermeable cytoplasmic membrane was a key event in the development of primordial cells because it provided a privileged space for the faithful copying of the genetic material, a reaction vessel for biochemical transformations, and for energy generation to fuel growth

  • The cytoplasm of microorganisms is a highly crowded compartment caused by large concentrations of nucleic acids, proteins, and metabolites [1,2]

  • The studies by Harding et al [43,44] focusing on H. seosinensis and P. kirbyi and that of Weinisch et al [45] on S. salinarum show that the synthesis and import of compatible solutes (Box 1) make major contributions to their salt stress adaption

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Summary

Introduction

The invention of a semipermeable cytoplasmic membrane was a key event in the development of primordial cells because it provided a privileged space for the faithful copying of the genetic material, a reaction vessel for biochemical transformations, and for energy generation to fuel growth. To accomplish this under hyperosmotic conditions, microbial cells accumulate ions through transport and synthesize or import physiologically compliant organic osmolytes [15], the compatible solutes (Box 1), to promote water retention and influx (Fig 1) [2,6,7].

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