4.5 Review

Halophiles: biology, adaptation, and their role in decontamination of hypersaline environments

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY & BIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 8, Pages 135-+

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11274-016-2081-9

Keywords

Bioremediation; Halophiles; Halogenated compounds; Hypersaline; Recalcitrant; Saline

Funding

  1. Ministry of Higher Education Malaysia [FRGS R.J130000.7826.4F649]
  2. Ministry of Education, Malaysia [GUP Q.J130000.2545.09H95]
  3. Libyan Government [700/2007]

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The unique cellular enzymatic machinery of halophilic microbes allows them to thrive in extreme saline environments. That these microorganisms can prosper in hypersaline environments has been correlated with the elevated acidic amino acid content in their proteins, which increase the negative protein surface potential. Because these microorganisms effectively use hydrocarbons as their sole carbon and energy sources, they may prove to be valuable bioremediation agents for the treatment of saline effluents and hypersaline waters contaminated with toxic compounds that are resistant to degradation. This review highlights the various strategies adopted by halophiles to compensate for their saline surroundings and includes descriptions of recent studies that have used these microorganisms for bioremediation of environments contaminated by petroleum hydrocarbons. The known halotolerant dehalogenase-producing microbes, their dehalogenation mechanisms, and how their proteins are stabilized is also reviewed. In view of their robustness in saline environments, efforts to document their full potential regarding remediation of contaminated hypersaline ecosystems merits further exploration.

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