Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Is there a common water-activity limit for the three domains of life?

316

Citations

120

References

2014

Year

TLDR

Archaea and Bacteria dominate Earth’s life but are traditionally viewed as less tolerant to solutes than eukaryotes, with halophilic prokaryotes thriving at saturated NaCl (aw ≈ 0.755) and xerophilic fungi germinating at aw as low as 0.605. The study aims to demonstrate that halophilic prokaryotes can grow at water activities below 0.755, challenging the presumed solute tolerance limits. By measuring growth curves and extrapolating minima, and by manipulating chaotropic and kosmotropic stressors in xerophilic fungi, the authors estimated theoretical water‑activity limits for diverse organisms. Halophilic prokaryotes were shown to grow down to aw 0.635, with theoretical minima as low as 0.611, while xerophilic fungi limits were reduced to 0.640 and theoretical limits to 0.636, indicating a common physicochemical water‑activity threshold across all three domains.

Abstract

Abstract Archaea and Bacteria constitute a majority of life systems on Earth but have long been considered inferior to Eukarya in terms of solute tolerance. Whereas the most halophilic prokaryotes are known for an ability to multiply at saturated NaCl (water activity (aw) 0.755) some xerophilic fungi can germinate, usually at high-sugar concentrations, at values as low as 0.650–0.605 aw. Here, we present evidence that halophilic prokayotes can grow down to water activities of <0.755 for Halanaerobium lacusrosei (0.748), Halobacterium strain 004.1 (0.728), Halobacterium sp. NRC-1 and Halococcus morrhuae (0.717), Haloquadratum walsbyi (0.709), Halococcus salifodinae (0.693), Halobacterium noricense (0.687), Natrinema pallidum (0.681) and haloarchaeal strains GN-2 and GN-5 (0.635 aw). Furthermore, extrapolation of growth curves (prone to giving conservative estimates) indicated theoretical minima down to 0.611 aw for extreme, obligately halophilic Archaea and Bacteria. These were compared with minima for the most solute-tolerant Bacteria in high-sugar (or other non-saline) media (Mycobacterium spp., Tetragenococcus halophilus, Saccharibacter floricola, Staphylococcus aureus and so on) and eukaryotic microbes in saline (Wallemia spp., Basipetospora halophila, Dunaliella spp. and so on) and high-sugar substrates (for example, Xeromyces bisporus, Zygosaccharomyces rouxii, Aspergillus and Eurotium spp.). We also manipulated the balance of chaotropic and kosmotropic stressors for the extreme, xerophilic fungi Aspergillus penicilloides and X. bisporus and, via this approach, their established water-activity limits for mycelial growth (∼0.65) were reduced to 0.640. Furthermore, extrapolations indicated theoretical limits of 0.632 and 0.636 aw for A. penicilloides and X. bisporus, respectively. Collectively, these findings suggest that there is a common water-activity limit that is determined by physicochemical constraints for the three domains of life.

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