The
Archaea are a group of single-celled
microorganisms. A single individual or species
from this domain is called an
archaeon (sometimes spelled
"archeon"). They have no
cell nucleus
or any other
organelles within their
cells. In the past they were viewed as an unusual group of bacteria
and named
archaebacteria but since the Archaea
have an independent
evolutionary history
and show many differences in their biochemistry from other forms of
life, they are now classified as a separate
domain in the
three-domain system. In this system the
three main branches of evolutionary descent are the Archaea,
Eukarya and
Bacteria. Archaea are further divided into four
recognized phyla, but many more phyla may exist. Of these groups
the
Crenarchaeota and the
Euryarchaeota are most intensively studied.
Classifying the Archaea is still difficult, since the vast majority
have never been studied in the laboratory and have only been
detected by analysis of their
nucleic
acids in samples from the environment. Although archaea have,
in the past, been classed with
bacteria as
prokaryotes, this classification
has been described as outdated, since it fails to distinguish
between the three very distinct domains of life.
Generally, archaea and bacteria are quite similar in size and
shape, although a few archaea have very unusual shapes, such as the
flat and square-shaped cells of
Haloquadra walsbyi. Despite this visual
similarity to bacteria, archaea possess genes and several
metabolic pathways that are more closely
related to those of eukaryotes: notably the enzymes involved in
transcription and
translation. Other aspects of archaean
biochemistry are unique, such as their reliance on
ether lipids in their
cell membranes. The archaea exploit a much
greater variety of sources of energy than eukaryotes: ranging from
familiar
organic compounds such as
sugars, to using
ammonia,
metal ions or even
hydrogen gas as nutrients. Salt-tolerant
archaea (the
Halobacteria) use sunlight
as a source of energy, and other species of archaea
fix carbon; however, unlike
plants and
cyanobacteria,
no species of archaea is known to do both. Archaea
reproduce asexually and divide by
binary fission, fragmentation, or
budding; in contrast to bacteria and eukaryotes, no species of
archaea are known that form
spores.
Initially, archaea were seen as
extremophiles that lived in harsh environments,
such as
hot springs and
salt lakes, but they have since been found in a
broad range of
habitats, such as
soils,
oceans, and
marshlands. Archaea are particularly numerous in
the oceans, and the archaea in
plankton may
be one of the most abundant groups of organisms on the planet.
Archaea are now recognized as a major part of life on Earth and may
play an important role in both the
carbon
cycle and
nitrogen cycle. No
clear examples of archaeal
pathogens or
parasites are known, but they are often
mutualists or
commensals. One example are the
methanogenic archaea that inhabit the gut of
humans and
ruminants, where they are
present in vast numbers and aid in the
digestion of food. Archaea have some importance in
technology, with methanogens used to produce
biogas and as part of
sewage treatment, and enzymes from
extremophile archaea that can resist high temperatures and organic
solvents are exploited in
biotechnology.
Classification
A new domain
Early in the 20th century, prokaryotes were regarded as a single
group of organisms and classified based on their
biochemistry,
morphology and
metabolism. For example, microbiologists tried to
classify microorganisms based on the structures of their
cell walls, their shapes, and the substances they
consume. However, a new approach was proposed in 1965, using the
sequences of the
genes in these organisms to
work out which prokaryotes are genuinely related to each other.
This approach, known as
phylogenetics,
is the main method used today.
Archaea were first classified as a separate group of prokaryotes in
1977 by
Carl Woese and
George E. Fox in
phylogenetic trees based on the
sequences of
ribosomal RNA (rRNA)
genes. These two groups were originally named the Archaebacteria
and Eubacteria and treated as
kingdom or subkingdoms, which Woese and
Fox termed
Urkingdoms. Woese argued that this group of
prokaryotes is a fundamentally different sort of life. To emphasize
this difference, these two domains were later renamed Archaea and
Bacteria. The word
archaea comes from the
Ancient Greek , meaning "ancient
things".
At first, only the
methanogens were
placed in this new domain, and the archaea were seen as
extremophiles that exist only in habitats such as
hot springs and
salt
lakes. By the end of the 20th century, microbiologists realized
that the archaea are a large and diverse group of organisms that
are widely distributed in nature and are common in much less
extreme habitats, such as soils and oceans. This new appreciation
of the importance and ubiquity of archaea came from using the
polymerase chain reaction
to detect prokaryotes in samples of water or soil from their
nucleic acids alone. This allows the
detection and identification of organisms that cannot be
cultured in the laboratory, which is
often difficult.
Current classification
The classification of archaea, and of prokaryotes in general, is a
rapidly moving and contentious field. Current classification
systems aim to organize archaea into groups of organisms that share
structural features and common ancestors. These classifications
rely heavily on the use of the sequence of
ribosomal RNA genes to reveal relationships
between organisms (
molecular
phylogenetics). Most of the culturable and well-investigated
species of archaea are members of two main
phyla, the
Euryarchaeota
and
Crenarchaeota. Other groups have
been tentatively created. For example, the peculiar species
Nanoarchaeum equitans, which
was discovered in 2003, has been given its own phylum, the
Nanoarchaeota. A new phylum
Korarchaeota has also been proposed. It
contains a small group of unusual thermophilic species that shares
features of both of the main phyla, but is most closely related to
the Crenarchaeota. Other recently detected species of archaea are
only distantly related to any of these groups, such as the
Archaeal
Richmond Mine Acidophilic Nanoorganisms (ARMAN), which were
discovered in 2006.
The classification of archaea into species is also controversial.
In biology, a
species is a group of related
organisms. A popular definition of a species in
animals is a set of organisms that can breed with
each other and are
reproductively
isolated from other groups of organisms (
i.e. they
cannot breed with other species). However, efforts to classify
prokaryotes such as archaea into species are complicated by the
fact that they are asexual and show high levels of
horizontal gene transfer between
lineages. The area is contentious; with, for example, some data
suggesting that in archaea such as the genus
Ferroplasma, individual cells can be
grouped into populations that have highly similar genomes and
rarely transfer genes with more divergent groups of cells. These
groups of cells are argued to be analogous to species. On the other
hand, studies in
Halorubrum
found significant genetic exchange between such populations. Such
results have led to the argument that classifying these groups of
organisms as species would have little practical meaning.
Current knowledge on the diversity of archaea is fragmentary and
the total number of archaean species cannot be estimated with any
accuracy. Even estimates of the total number of phyla in the
archaea range from 18 to 23, of which only 8 phyla have
representatives that have been grown in culture and studied
directly. Many of these hypothetical groups are known from only a
single rRNA sequence, indicating that the vast majority of the
diversity among these organisms remains completely unknown. The
problem of how to study and classify uncultured microbes is also
encountered in the Bacteria.
Origin and evolution
Although probable
fossils of prokaryotic
cells have been dated to almost 3.5
billion
years ago, most prokaryotes do not have distinctive
morphologies and the shapes of fossils cannot be used to identify
them as Archaea. Instead, chemical fossils, in the form of the
unique
lipids found in archaea, are more
informative because such compounds do not occur in other groups of
organisms. Some publications have suggested that the remains of
lipids that may be either archaean or eukaryotic were present in
shales dating from 2.7 billion years ago;
these data have since been questioned. Such lipids have also been
detected in rocks dating back to the
Precambrian.
The oldest known traces of these isoprene
lipids come from the Isua
district of west Greenland
, which include sediments formed 3.8 billion
years ago and are the oldest on Earth. The origin of Archaea
appears very old indeed and the archaeal lineage may be the most
ancient that exists on earth.
Woese argued that the bacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes each
represent a separate line of descent that diverged early on from an
ancestral colony of organisms. A few biologists, however, have
argued that the Archaea and Eukaryota arose from a group of
bacteria. It is possible that the last common ancestor of the
bacteria and archaea was a thermophile, which raises the
possibility that lower temperatures are "extreme environments" in
archaeal terms, and organisms that live in cooler environments
appeared later in the history of life on Earth. Since the Archaea
and Bacteria are no more related to each other than they are to
eukaryotes, this has led to the argument that the term
prokaryote has no real evolutionary meaning and should be
discarded entirely.
The relationship between archaea and eukaryotes remains an
important problem. Aside from the similarities in cell structure
and function that are discussed below, many genetic trees group the
two together. Some early analyses even suggested that the
relationship between eukaryotes and the archaeal phylum
Euryarchaeota is closer than the relationship
between the Euryarchaeota and the phylum
Crenarchaeota. However, it is now considered
more likely that the ancestor of the eukaryotes diverged early from
the Archaea. The discovery of archaean-like genes in certain
bacteria, such as
Thermotoga
maritima, makes these relationships difficult to
determine, since
horizontal
gene transfer has occurred. Some have suggested that eukaryotes
arose through fusion of an archaean and eubacterium, which became
the nucleus and
cytoplasm; this accounts
for various genetic similarities but runs into difficulties
explaining cell structure.
Morphology

The sizes of prokaryotic cells
relative to other cells and biomolecules.
Individual archaeans range from 0.1
micrometer (μm) to over 15 μm in diameter,
and occur in various shapes, commonly as spheres, rods, spirals or
plates. Other morphologies in the
Crenarchaeota include irregularly shaped lobed
cells in
Sulfolobus, thin
needle-like filaments that are less than half a micrometer in
diameter in
Thermofilum, and
almost perfectly rectangular rods in
Thermoproteus and
Pyrobaculum. There is even a species of
flat, square archaea called
Haloquadra
walsbyi that lives in hypersaline pools. These unusual
shapes are probably maintained both by their cell walls and a
prokaryotic cytoskeleton.
Proteins related to the cytoskeleton components of other organisms
exist in the archaea, and filaments are formed within their cells,
but in contrast to other organisms, these cellular structures are
poorly understood in archaea. In
Thermoplasma and
Ferroplasma the lack of a
cell wall means that the cells have irregular
shapes, and can resemble
amoebae.
Some species of archaea form aggregates or filaments of cells up to
200 μm long, and these organisms can be prominent members of
the communities of microbes that make up
biofilms. An extreme example is
Thermococcus coalescens, as aggregates of
these cells fuse together in culture, forming single giant cells. A
particularly elaborate form of multicellular colony is produced by
archaea in the genus
Pyrodictium. Here, the cells produce arrays
of long, thin hollow tubes called
cannulae that stick out
from the cells' surfaces and connect them together into a dense
bush-like colony. The function of these cannulae is not known, but
they may allow the cells to communicate or exchange nutrients with
their neighbors. Colonies can also be produced by an association
between different species. For example, in the "string-of-pearls"
community that was discovered in 2001 in a German swamp, round
whitish colonies of a novel species of archaea in the phylum
Euryarchaeota are spaced along thin filaments that can be up to
long; these filaments are made of a particular species of
bacteria.
Cell structure
Archaea are similar to bacteria in their general
cell structure, but the composition and
organization of some of these structures set the archaea apart.
Like bacteria, archaea lack interior membranes so their cells do
not contain
organelles. They also resemble
bacteria in that their cell membrane is usually bounded by a
cell wall and they swim by the use of one
or more
flagella. In overall structure the
archaea are most similar to
gram-positive bacteria, as most have
a single plasma membrane and cell wall, and lack a
periplasmic space; the exception to this
general rule is the archaean
Ignicoccus, which possess a particularly
large periplasm that contains membrane-bound
vesicles and is enclosed by an outer
membrane.
Cell membranes

Membrane structures.
Top: an archaeal phospholipid,
1 isoprene sidechain, 2 ether
linkage, 3 L-glycerol, 4
phosphate moieties.
Middle: a bacterial and eukaryotic
phospholipid: 5 fatty acid, 6
ester linkage, 7 D-glycerol, 8
phosphate moieties.
Bottom: 9 lipid bilayer of
bacteria and eukaryotes, 10 lipid monolayer of
some archaea.
Archaeal membranes are made of molecules that differ strongly from
those in other forms of life, which is evidence that archaea are
related only distantly to bacteria and eukaryotes. In all organisms
cell membranes are made of molecules
known as
phospholipids. These molecules
possess both a
polar part that
will dissolve in water (the
phosphate
"head"), and a "greasy" non-polar part that will not dissolve in
water (the lipid tail). These dissimilar parts are connected by a
glycerol group. In water, phospholipids
cluster together, with the polar phosphate heads facing the water
and the non-polar lipid tails facing away from the water. This
causes them to assemble into layers. The major structure in cell
membranes is a double layer of these phospholipids, which is called
a
lipid bilayer.
The phospholipids in the membranes of archaea are unusual in four
ways. Firstly, bacteria and eukaryotes have membranes composed
mainly of glycerol-
ester lipids, whereas archaea have membranes composed of
glycerol-
ether lipids. The difference
between these two types of phospholipid is the type of bond that
joins the lipids to the glycerol group; these two types of bonds
are shown in yellow in the Figure at the right. In ester lipids
this is an
ester bond, whereas in ether lipids
this is an
ether bond. Ether bonds are
chemically more resistant then ester bonds, which might contribute
to the ability of some archaea to survive at extremes of
temperature and in very acidic or alkaline environments. Bacteria
and eukaryotes do contain some ether lipids, but in contrast to
archaea these lipids are not a major part of their membranes.
Secondly, archaeal lipids are unique because the
stereochemistry of the glycerol group is the
reverse of that found in other organisms. The glycerol group can
occur in two forms that are mirror images of one another, which may
be called the right-handed and left-handed forms; in chemical terms
these forms are called
enantiomers. Just as a right hand does not
fit easily into a left-handed glove, a right-handed glycerol
molecule generally cannot be used or made by
enzymes adapted for the left-handed form. This
suggests that archaea use entirely different enzymes for
synthesizing their phospholipids than do bacteria and eukaryotes;
since such enzymes developed very early in life's history, this in
turn suggests that the archaea split off very early from the other
two domains.
Thirdly, the lipid tails of the phospholipids of archaea are
chemically different from those in other organisms. Archaeal lipids
are based upon the
isoprenoid sidechain and
are long chains with multiple side-branches and sometimes even
cyclopropane or
cyclohexane rings. This is in contrast to the
fatty acids found in other organisms'
membranes, which have straight chains with no branches or rings.
Although isoprenoids play an important role in the biochemistry of
many organisms, only the archaea use them to make phospholipids.
These branched chains may help prevent archaean membranes from
becoming leaky at high temperatures.
Finally, in some archaea the phospholipid bilayer is replaced by a
single monolayer. In effect, the archaea have fused the tails of
two independent phospholipid molecules into a single molecule with
two polar heads; this fusion may make their membranes more rigid
and better able to resist harsh environments. For example, all the
lipids in
Ferroplasma are of
this type, which is thought to aid this organism's survival in the
extraordinarily acidic environments in which it thrives.
Cell wall and flagella
Most archaea possess a cell wall—the exceptions being
Thermoplasma and
Ferroplasma. In most archaea the wall is
assembled from surface-layer proteins, which form an
S-layer. An S-layer is made of a rigid array of
protein molecules that cover the outside of the cell like chain
mail. This layer provides both chemical and physical protection,
and can act as a barrier preventing
macromolecules from coming into contact with
the cell membrane. In contrast to bacteria, most archaea lack
peptidoglycan in their cell walls. The
exception is
pseudopeptidoglycan, which is found in
Methanobacteriales, but this
polymer is different from the peptidoglycan of bacteria since it
lacks
D-amino acids and
N-acetylmuramic acid.
Archaea also have
flagella, and these
operate in a similar way to bacterial flagella—they are long stalks
that are driven by rotatory motors at the base of the flagella.
These motors are powered by the
proton gradient across the
membrane. However, archaeal flagella are notably different in their
composition and development. The two types of flagella evolved from
different ancestors, the bacterial flagellum shares a common
ancestor with the
type
III secretion system, while archaeal flagella appear to have
evolved from the bacterial type IV
pili. In
contrast to the bacterial flagellum, which is a hollow stalk and is
assembled by subunits moving up the central pore and then adding
onto the tip of the flagella, archaeal flagella are synthesized by
adding subunits onto their base.
Metabolism
Archaea exhibit a great variety of chemical reactions in their
metabolism and use many different sources
of energy. These forms of metabolism are classified into
nutritional groups, depending on
the source of energy and the source of carbon. Some archaea obtain
their energy from
inorganic
compounds such as
sulfur or
ammonia (they are
lithotrophs). These archaea include
nitrifier,
methanogens and
anaerobic methane oxidisers. In these reactions one compound passes
electrons to another (in a
redox reaction),
releasing energy that is then used to fuel the cell's activities.
One compound acts as an
electron
donor and one as an
electron
acceptor. A common feature of all these reactions is that the
energy released is used to generate
adenosine triphosphate (ATP) through
chemiosmosis, which is the same basic
process that happens in the
mitochondrion of animal cells.
Other groups of archaea use sunlight as a source of energy (they
are
phototrophs). However,
oxygen-generating
photosynthesis does
not occur in any of these organisms. Many basic
metabolic pathways are shared between all
forms of life; for example, archaea use a modified form of
glycolysis (the
Entner–Doudoroff pathway)
and either a complete or partial
citric acid cycle. These similarities with
other organisms probably reflect both the early evolution of these
parts of metabolism in the history of life and their high level of
efficiency.
Some Euryarchaeota are
methanogens and
produce methane gas in
anaerobic
environments such as swamps. This form of metabolism evolved
early, and it is even possible that the first free-living organism
was a methanogen. A common reaction in these organisms involves the
use of
carbon dioxide as an electron
acceptor to oxidize
hydrogen.
Methanogenesis involves a range of
coenzymes that are unique to these archaea, such as
coenzyme M and
methanofuran. Other organic compounds such as
alcohols,
acetic
acid or
formic acid are used as
alternative
electron acceptors by
methanogens. These reactions are common in
gut-dwelling archaea. Acetic acid is also broken down
into methane and carbon dioxide directly, by
acetotrophic
archaea. These acetotrophs are archaea in the order
Methanosarcinales, and are a major part of
the communities of microorganisms that produce
biogas.
Other archaea use CO
2 in the atmosphere as a source of
carbon, in a process called
carbon
fixation (they are
autotrophs). In the
archaea, this process involves either a highly modified form of the
Calvin cycle, or a recently discovered
metabolic pathway called the 3-hydroxypropionate/4-hydroxybutyrate
cycle. The Crenarchaeota also use the
reverse Krebs cycle and the
Euryarchaeota also use the
reductive acetyl-CoA pathway.
In these organisms, carbon-fixation is powered by inorganic sources
of energy, rather than by capturing sunlight as in plants and
cyanobacteria. There are no known
archaea that carry out
photosynthesis, which is when light is used
by
photoautotrophs as a source of
energy as well as driving the fixation of carbon dioxide. The
energy sources used by archaea to fix carbon are extremely diverse,
and range from the oxidation of
ammonia by
the
Nitrosopumilales to the
oxidation of
hydrogen sulfide or
elemental
sulfur by species of
Sulfolobus, using either oxygen or metal
ions as electron acceptors.
Phototrophic archaea use light to produce
chemical energy in the form of ATP. In the
Halobacteria, light-activated ion pumps like
bacteriorhodopsin and
halorhodopsin generate ion gradients by
pumping the ions out of the cell across the
plasma membrane. The energy stored in these
electrochemical gradients
is then converted into ATP by
ATP
synthase. This process is a form of
photophosphorylation. The structure and
function of these light-driven pumps has been studied in great
detail, which has revealed that their ability to move ions across
membranes depends on light-driven changes in the structure of a
retinol cofactor buried in the center of the
protein.
Genetics
Archaea usually have a single circular
chromosome, the size of which may be as great as
5,751,492
base pairs in
Methanosarcina acetivorans,
the largest archaean genome sequenced to date. At one-tenth of this
size is the tiny 490,885 base-pair genome of
Nanoarchaeum equitans, which is
the smallest archaeal genome known; it is estimated to contain only
537 protein-encoding genes. Smaller independent pieces of DNA,
called
plasmids, are also found in
archaea. Plasmids may be transferred between cells by physical
contact, in a process that may be similar to
bacterial conjugation.
Archaea can be infected by double-stranded
DNA viruses that are unrelated to any other form
of virus and have a variety of unusual shapes, with some resembling
bottles, hooked rods, or teardrops. These viruses have been studied
in most detail in the thermophilic archaea, particularly the orders
Sulfolobales and Thermoproteales. However, one example of a
single-stranded DNA virus that infects halophilic archaea was
identified in 2009. Defenses against these viruses may involve
RNA interference from
repetitive DNA sequences within archaean
genomes that are related to the genes of the viruses.
Archaea are genetically distinct from bacteria and eukaryotes, with
up to 15% of the proteins encoded by any one archaeal genome being
unique to the Archaea, although most of these unique genes have no
known function. Of the remainder of the genes unique to archaea
that have an identified function, most are involved in
methanogenesis. The genes that are shared between archaea, bacteria
and eukaryotes form a common core of cell function, relating mostly
to
transcription,
translation, and
nucleotide metabolism. Other characteristic
features of archaean genomes are the organization of genes of
related function—such as enzymes catalysing steps in the same
metabolic pathway—into novel
operons, and large differences in
tRNA genes and their
aminoacyl tRNA synthetases.
Transcription and translation in archaea are more similar to these
processes in eukaryotes than in bacteria, with the archaean
RNA polymerase and
ribosomes being very close to their equivalents in
eukaryotes. Although archaea only have one type of RNA polymerase,
its structure and function in transcription seems to be close to
that of the eukaryotic
RNA polymerase
II, with similar assemblies of proteins (the
general transcription factors)
directing the binding of the RNA polymerase to a gene's
promoter. However, other archaean
transcription factors are closer to
those found in bacteria.
Post-transcriptional
modification is simpler than in eukaryotes, since most archaean
genes lack
introns, although there are many
introns in their
transfer RNA and
ribosomal RNA genes, and introns may
occur in a few of their protein-encoding genes.
Reproduction
Archaea reproduce asexually by binary or multiple fission,
fragmentation, or budding;
meiosis does not
occur, so if a species of archaea exists in more than one form,
these will all have the same genetic material.
Cell division is controlled in the archaea in
a
cell cycle; after the cell's
chromosome is replicated and the two daughter
chromosomes are separated, the cell divides. The details of the
archaeal cell cycle have only been investigated in the genus
Sulfolobus, but here it has
characters that are similar to both bacterial and eukaryotic
systems. In this archaean, the chromosomes are replicated from
multiple starting-points (
origins
of replication) using
DNA
polymerases that resemble the equivalent eukaryotic enzymes.
However, the proteins that direct cell division, such as the
protein
FtsZ, which forms a contracting ring
around the cell, and the components of the
septum that is constructed across the center of the
cell, are similar to their bacterial equivalents.
Spores are made by both bacteria and
eukaryotes, but are not formed in any of the known archaea. Some
species of
Haloarchaea undergo
phenotypic switching and grow as
several different types of cell, including thick-walled structures
that are resistant to
osmotic shock
and allow the archaea to survive in water at low concentrations of
salt, but these are not reproductive structures and may instead
help them disperse to new habitats.
Ecology
Habitats
Archaea exist in a broad range of
habitats,
and are a major part of global
ecosystems,
and may contribute up to 20% of the total
biomass on Earth. Multiple archaeans are
extremophiles, and historically this
was seen as their
ecological niche.
Indeed, some archaea survive high temperatures, often above
100
°C, as found in
geysers,
black smokers,
and oil wells. Others are found in very cold habitats and others in
highly
saline,
acidic, or
alkaline water. However, other archaea are
mesophiles that grow in much milder
conditions, in
marshland,
sewage, the
oceans, and
soils.
Extremophile archaea are members of four main
physiological groups. These are the
halophiles,
thermophiles,
alkaliphiles, and
acidophile. These groups are not
comprehensive or related to which phylum the organisms belong to,
nor are they mutually exclusive, since some archaea belong to
several of these groups. Nonetheless, they are a useful starting
point for classification.
Halophiles, including the genus
Halobacterium, live in extremely saline
environments such as
salt lakes and start
outnumbering their bacterial counterparts at salinities greater
than 20–25%. Thermophiles grow best at temperatures above
45 °C, in places such as hot springs;
hyperthermophilic archaea are defined as those that grow
optimally at temperatures greater than 80 °C. The archaeal
Methanopyrus kandleri
Strain 116 grows at 122 °C, which is the highest recorded
temperature at which any organism will grow. Other archaea exist in
very acidic or alkaline conditions. For example, one of the most
extreme archaean acidophiles is
Picrophilus torridus,
which grows at pH 0, which is equivalent to thriving in
1.2
Molar sulfuric acid.
This resistance to extreme environments has made archaea the focus
of speculation about the possible properties of
extraterrestrial life. This has
focused on the possibility that microbial life may exist on
Mars, and has even led to the suggestion that
viable microbes could be transferred between planets in
meteorites.
Recently, several studies have shown that archaea exist not only in
mesophilic and thermophilic environments but are also present,
sometimes in high numbers, at low temperatures as well. For
example, archaea are common in cold oceanic environments such as
polar seas. Even more significant are the large numbers of archaea
found throughout the world's oceans in the
plankton community (as part of the
picoplankton). Although these archaea can be
present in extremely high numbers (up to 40% of the microbial
biomass), almost none of these species have been isolated and
studied in
pure culture. Consequently,
our understanding of the role of archaea in the ecology of the
oceans is rudimentary, so their full influence on global
biogeochemical cycles remains largely
unexplored. Some marine Crenarchaeota are capable of
nitrification, suggesting these organisms may
be important in the oceanic
nitrogen
cycle, although these oceanic Crenarchaeota may also use other
sources of energy. Vast numbers of archaea are also found in the
sediments that cover the
sea floor, with these organisms making up the
majority of living cells at depths over 1 meter into this
sediment.
Role in chemical cycling
Archaea are part of the systems on Earth that recycle elements such
as
carbon,
nitrogen
and
sulfur through the various habitats in
ecosystems. Although these activities are
vital for the normal function of ecosystems, archaea can also
contribute to the changes that humans have made in the environment,
and even cause
pollution.
Archaea carry out many steps in the
nitrogen cycle, this includes both
dissimilatory reactions that remove nitrogen from ecosystems, such
as
nitrate-based respiration and
denitrification: as well as assimilatory
processes that introduce nitrogen, such as nitrate assimilation and
nitrogen fixation. The involvement
of archaea in
ammonia oxidation reactions
was recently discovered; these being particularly important in the
oceans. The archaea also appear to be crucial for ammonia oxidation
in soils, this produces
nitrite, which is
then oxidized to
nitrate by other microbes,
and then taken up by plants and other organisms.
In the
sulfur cycle, archaea that grow
by oxidizing
sulfur compounds are important
as they release this element from rocks, making it available to
other organisms. However, the archaea that do this, such as
Sulfolobus, can cause environmental damage since they
produce
sulfuric acid as a waste
product, and the growth of these organisms in abandoned mines can
contribute to
acid mine
drainage.
In the
carbon cycle, methanogen archaea
are significant as methane producers. The ability of these archaea
to remove hydrogen is important in the degradation of organic
matter by the populations of microorganisms that act as
decomposers in anaerobic ecosystems, such as
sediments, marshes and
sewage
treatment works. However, methane is one of the most abundant
greenhouse gases in Earth's
atmosphere, constituting 18% of the global total. It is 25 times
more potent as a greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. Methanogens
are the primary source of
atmospheric methane, and are responsible
for most of the world's yearly
methane emissions. As a
consequence, these archaea contribute to global greenhouse gas
emissions and
global warming.
Interactions with other organisms
The well-characterized interactions between archaea and other
organisms are either
mutualism or
commensal. As of 2007, no clear
examples of archaeal
pathogens or
parasites are known. However, a relationship has
been proposed between the presence of some species of methanogens
and
infections in the mouth, and
Nanoarchaeum equitans
may be a parasite of another species of archaea, since it only
survives and reproduces within the cells of the Crenarchaeon
Ignicoccus hospitalis, and
appears to offer no benefit to its
host.
One well-understood example of mutualism is the interaction between
protozoa and
methanogenic archaea in the
digestive tracts of animals that digest
cellulose, such as
ruminants and
termites. In
these anaerobic environments,
protozoa
break down
cellulose from plant material
to obtain energy. This process releases hydrogen as a waste
product, but high levels of hydrogen will reduce the energy
released by this reaction. When methanogens convert the hydrogen to
methane, the protozoa benefit as they will gain more energy from
breaking down cellulose.
These associations between methanogens and protozoa are taken a
step further in several species of anaerobic protozoa, such as
Plagiopyla frontata; here the archaea actually reside
inside the protozoa and consume the hydrogen produced in their
hydrogenosomes. Similar associations
with larger organisms are now being found, with the discovery that
the marine archaean
Cenarchaeum
symbiosum lives within (it is an
endosymbiont of) the
sponge Axinella mexicana.
Archaea can also be commensals, benefiting from an association
without helping or harming the other organism. For example, the
methanogen
Methanobrevibacter smithii
is by far the most common archaean in the
human flora, with this species making up about
one in ten of all the prokaryotes in the human gut. As in termites,
these methanogens may in fact be mutualists in humans, interacting
with other microbes in the gut to aid the digestion of food.
Communities of archaea are also associated with a range of other
organisms, such as on the surface of
corals,
and in the region of soil that surrounds plant roots (the
rhizosphere).
Significance in technology and industry
Extremophile archaea, particularly
those resistant either to heat or to extremes of acidity and
alkalinity, are a source of
enzymes that
function under these harsh conditions. These enzymes have a wide
range of uses. For example, thermostable
DNA polymerases, such as the
Pfu DNA polymerase from
Pyrococcus furiosus, have
revolutionized
molecular biology
by allowing the
polymerase
chain reaction to be used as a simple and rapid technique for
cloning DNA. In industry,
amylases,
galactosidases and
pullulanases in other species of
Pyrococcus that function at over 100 °C
allow
food processing at high
temperatures, such as the production of low lactose milk and whey.
Enzymes from these thermophilic archaea also tend to be very stable
in organic solvents, allowing their use in environmentally friendly
processes in
green chemistry that
synthesize organic compounds. The stability of thermophilic enzymes
also makes them easier to use in
structural biology, consequently the
counterparts of bacterial or eukaryotic enzymes from extremophile
archaea are often used in structural studies.
In contrast to the range of applications of archaean enzymes, the
use of the organisms themselves in biotechnology is more
restricted. However, methanogenic archaea are a vital part of
sewage treatment, since they are
part of the community of microorganisms that carry out
anaerobic digestion and produce
biogas. In
mineral
processing, Acidophilic archaea display promise for the
extraction of metals from
ores, including gold,
cobalt and copper.
A new class of potentially useful
antibiotics has been discovered in archaea. A few
of these
archaeocins have been
characterized, but hundreds more are believed to exist, especially
within
Haloarchaea and
Sulfolobus. These compounds are
important since they are different in structure to bacterial
antibiotics, so they may have novel modes of action. In addition,
they may allow the creation of new
selectable markers for use in archaeal
molecular biology. The discovery of new archaeocins depends on
successful recovery and cultivation of new species of archaea from
the environment.
See also
References
Further reading
External links
General
Classification
Genomics