Photolyases and Cryptochromes in UV-resistant Bacteria from High-altitude Andean Lakes.

Photochem Photobiol

Laboratorio de Investigaciones Microbiológicas de Lagunas Andinas (LIMLA), Planta Piloto de Procesos Industriales y Microbiológicos (PROIMI), CCT, CONICET, Tucumán, Argentina.

Published: January 2019

AI Article Synopsis

  • High-altitude Andean Lakes (HAAL) are unique ecosystems that host extremely resilient microbes adapted to extreme conditions like high temperatures, intense UV radiation, and high arsenic levels.
  • Researchers studied three distinct UV-resistant bacteria from HAAL to understand their resistance profiles and mechanisms, revealing that these microbes possess a "UV-resistome"—a set of genes that help them cope with UV damage.
  • They also identified and characterized proteins similar to photolyases/cryptochromes in these bacteria, confirming their potential function in repairing UV-induced damage through advanced genetic and structural analysis.

Article Abstract

"High-altitude Andean Lakes" (HAAL) are pristine environments harboring poly-extremophilic microbes that show combined adaptations to physical and chemical stress such as large daily ambient thermal amplitude, extreme solar radiation levels, intense dryness, alkalinity, high concentrations of arsenic (up to 200 ppm) and dissolved salts. In this work, we compared the UV resistance profiles, pigment content and photoreactivation abilities of three UV-resistant bacteria isolated from distinct niches from HAALs, that is Acinetobacter sp. Ver3 (water, Lake Verde; 4400 m), Exiguobacterium sp. S17 (stromatolite, Lake Socompa, 3570 m) and Nesterenkonia sp. Act20 (soil, Lake Socompa, 3570 m). UV resistance ability of HAAL's strains indicate a clear adaptation to high radiation exposure encountered in their original habitat, which can be explained by genetic and physiological mechanisms named as the UV-resistome. Thus, the UV-resistome depends on the expression of a diverse set of genes devoted to evading or repairing the damage it provoked direct or indirectly. As pigment extraction and photoreactive assays indicate the presence of photoactive molecules, we characterized more in detail proteins with homology to photolyases/cryptochromes members (CPF). Phylogenetic analyses, sequence comparison and 3D modeling with bona fide CPF members were used to prove the presence of functional domains and key residues in the novel proteins.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/php.13061DOI Listing

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