The
Archaea (AmE [ɑɹˈkiə], BrE [ɑːˈkiə]), or
archaebacteria, are a major group of
microorganisms. Like
bacteria, archaea are single-celled organisms that lack
nuclei and are therefore
prokaryotes, classified in
kingdom Monera in the traditional five-kingdom
taxonomy. Although there's still uncertainty in the
phylogeny, Archaea,
Eukaryota and Bacteria are the fundamental classifications of what is called the
three-domain system. Although their prokaryotic features are diagnostic of that clade, archaea are more closely related to eukaryotes than to bacteria. To account for this, archaeans and eukaryotes are grouped together in the
clade Neomura, which is thought to have arisen from
gram-positive bacteria. Archaea were originally described in
extreme environments, but have since been found in all
habitats and may contribute up to 20% of total
biomass.
A single individual or species from this domain is called an
archaeon (sometimes spelled "archeon"), while the
adjectival form is
archaeal or
archaean. The
etymology is
Greek, from αρχαία meaning "ancient ones".
Habitats
Multiple archaeans are
extremophiles, and some would say this is their
ecological niche. although a relationship has been proposed between the presence of some methanogens and human
periodontal disease.
Archaea are commonly placed into three
physiological groups. These are the
halophiles,
thermophiles and
acidophiles. These groups are not necessarily comprehensive or
monophyletic, nor even mutually exclusive. Nonetheless, they're a useful starting point for ecological studies. Halophiles, including the
genus Halobacterium, live in extremely saline environments and start outnumbering their bacterial counterparts at salinities greater than 20-25%. Currently we've almost no information regarding the physiology of these organisms, meaning that their effects on global
biogeochemical cycles remain unknown. One recent study has shown, however, that one group of marine
crenarchaeota are capable of
nitrification, a trait previously unknown among the archaea.
History of archaean microbiology
Archaea were identified in 1977 by
Carl Woese and
George E. Fox as being a separate branch based on their separation from other prokaryotes on 16S
rRNA phylogenetic trees. These two groups were originally named the Archaebacteria and Eubacteria, treated as
kingdoms or subkingdoms, which Woese and Fox termed Urkingdoms. Woese argued that they represented fundamentally different branches of living things. He later renamed the groups Archaea and
Bacteria to emphasize this, and argued that together with
Eukarya they compose
three Domains of living organisms.
Morphology and physiology
Size and shape
Individual archaeans range from 0.1 μm to over 15 μm in diameter, and some form aggregates or filaments up to 200 μm in length. They occur in various shapes, such as spherical, rod-shape, spiral, lobed, or rectangular. Archaea have no
murein in their cell walls. Recently, a species of flat, square archaean that lives in hypersaline pools has been discovered.
Comparison of archaeal, bacterial and eukaryotic cells
Archaea are similar to other
prokaryotes in most aspects of
cell structure and
metabolism. However, their genetic
transcription and
translation — the two central processes in
molecular biology — don't show many typical bacterial features, and are in many aspects similar to those of
eukaryotes. For instance, archaeal translation uses eukaryotic-like initiation and elongation factors, and their transcription involves
TATA Binding Proteins and TFIIB as in eukaryotes. Many archaeal tRNA and rRNA genes harbor unique archaeal
introns which are neither like eukaryotic introns, nor like bacterial (type I and type II etc which can "home") introns.
Several other characteristics also set the Archaea apart. Like bacteria and eukaryotes, archaea possess
glycerol-based
phospholipids. However, three features of the archaeal lipids are unusual:
- The archaeal lipids are unique because the stereochemistry of the glycerol is the reverse of that found in bacteria and eukaryotes. This is strong evidence for a different biosynthetic pathway.
- Most bacteria and eukaryotes have membranes composed mainly of glycerol-ester lipids, whereas archaea have membranes composed of glycerol-ether lipids. Even when bacteria have ether-linked lipids, the stereochemistry of the glycerol is the bacterial form. These differences may be an adaptation on the part of Archaea to hyperthermophily. However, it's worth noting that even mesophilic archaea have ether-linked lipids.
- Archaeal lipids are based upon the isoprenoid sidechain. This is a five-carbon unit that's also common in rubber and as a component of some bacterial and eukaryotic vitamins. However, only the archaea incorporate these compounds into their cellular lipids, frequently as C-20 (four monomers) or C-40 (eight monomers) side-chains. In some archaea, the C-40 isoprenoid side-chain is long enough to span the membrane, forming a monolayer for a cell membrane with glycerol phosphate moieties on both ends. Although dramatic, this adaptation is most common in the extremely thermophilic archaea.
Cell wall and flagella
Although not unique, archaeal cell walls are also unusual. For instance, in most archaea they're formed by surface-layer proteins or an S-layer. S-layers are common in bacteria, where they serve as the sole cell-wall component in some organisms (like the Planctomyces) or an outer layer in many organisms with
peptidoglycan. With the exception of one group of methanogens, archaea lack a peptidoglycan wall (and in the case of the exception, the peptidoglycan is very different from the type found in bacteria).
Archaeans also have
flagella that are notably different in composition and development from the superficially similar flagella of bacteria. The bacterial flagellum is a modified type III secretion system, while archeal flagella resemble type IV pilli which use a sec dependent secretion system somewhat similar to but different from type II secretion system.
Metabolism
Archaea exhibit a variety of different types of
metabolism; there are
nitrifiers, methanogens and anaerobic methane oxidisers., and the
Archael Richmond Mine Acidophilic Nanoorganisms (ARMAN) groups discovered by
Brett Baker, but their affinities are uncertain.
Woese argued that the bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes each represent a primary line of descent that diverged early on from an ancestral
progenote with poorly developed genetic machinery. Later he treated these groups formally as
domains, each comprising several kingdoms. This division has become very popular, although the idea of the progenote itself isn't generally supported. Some biologists, however, have argued that the archaebacteria and eukaryotes arose from specialized eubacteria.
The relationship between Archaea and Eukarya remains an important problem. Aside from the similarities noted above, many genetic trees group the two together. Some place eukaryotes closer to Euryarchaeota than Crenarchaeota are, although the membrane chemistry suggests otherwise. However, the discovery of archaean-like genes in certain bacteria, such as
Thermotoga, makes their relationship difficult to determine, as
horizontal gene transfer may have occurred. Some have suggested that eukaryotes arose through fusion of an archaean and eubacterium, which became the nucleus and cytoplasm, which accounts for various genetic similarities but runs into difficulties explaining cell structure.
Single gene
sequencing for
systematics has led to whole
genome sequencing; by January, 2007, 31 archaeal genomes have been completed with 29 partially completed.
Origin and early evolution
The Archaea shouldn't be confused with the
geological term
Archean eon, also known as the
Archeozoic era. This refers to the primordial period of
earth history when Archaea and Bacteria were the only
cellular organisms living on the planet. Probable
fossils of these
microbes have been dated to almost 3.5 billion years ago, and the remains of lipids that may be either archaean or eukaryotic have been detected in shales dating from 2.7 billion years ago.
The last common ancestor of Bacteria and Archaea was probably a non-methanogenic thermophile, raising the possibility that lower temperatures are extreme environments in archaeal terms, and organisms that can survive in cooler environments evolved later on.
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