In addition to the solar salterns of Cabo Rojo, Puerto Rico, where the type strain PR3
T and two accompanying strains (PR7 and PR9) were initially isolated [
1], the occurrence of strains or phylotypes closely related or belonging to
H. borinquense have so far only been reported from high salt environments such as an Australian crystallizer pond [
6], Maras Salterns in the Peruvian Andes [
7], a salt field at Nie, Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan [
8], the salterns of Tamilnadu, India (Kannan
et al. unpublished), Exportadora del Sal, Guerro Negro, Mexico (FJ609942), a Taiwanese saltern soil (FJ348412), and a low-salt, sulfide- and sulfur-rich spring in southwestern Oklahoma, USA [
9].
H. geometricum PR3
T cells are highly pleomorphic (short and long rods, squares, triangles and ovals) and motile by peritrichous flagella ( and ). Cells lyse in distilled water. Gas vesicles are present and are responsible for modifying the color of colonies or cell suspensions from red to pink.
H. geometricum PR3
T is aerobic, but also capable of anaerobic growth with nitrate. No anaerobic growth on arginine (arginine dihydrolase is not present). At least 8% NaCl (w/v) is required for growth, reflecting the primary characteristic requirement for high salt concentrations of the
Halobacteriaceae [
18]. The optimal NaCl concentration range is 20-25
% NaCl (w/v) at 40°C (optimal growth temperature). Nitrate is reduced to nitrite with the production of gas [
1]. Spores or other resting stages have not been reported [
1].
| Table 1Classification and general features of H. borinquense PR3T according to the MIGS recommendations [10] |
H. geometricum PR3
T is capable of degrading gelatin, but starch is not hydrolysed. A number of sugars and polyols are used as carbon sources, and acid is produced from some sugars [
1].
shows the phylogenetic neighborhood of H. borinquense strain PR3T in a 16S rRNA based tree. Analysis of the two 16S rRNA gene sequences in the genome of strain PR3T indicated that the two genes differ by five nucleotides (nts) from each other, and by 3-5 nts from the previously published 16S rRNA sequence generated from DSM 11551 (AF002984). The slight differences between the genome data and the reported 16S rRNA gene sequence are most likely the result of sequencing errors in the previously reported sequence data.
The quinone composition of
H. borinquense strain PR3
T has not been recorded, but based on reports from other members of the family
Halobacteriaceae menaquinones with eight isoprenoid units are likely to be present. Typically both MK-8 and MK-8 (VIII-H
2) are predicted. The lipids are based on isoprenoid diether lipids, but the exact nature of the isoprenoid side chains remains to be investigated. The major phospholipids are the diether, isoprenoid analogs of phosphatidylglycerol and methyl-phosphatidylglycerophosphate (typical of all members of the family
Halobacteriaceae), the diether analog of phosphatidyl-glycerol sulfate is absent [
1]. A single glycolipid has been reported with an R
f value similar to that of the triglycosyl diether from
Haloarcula marismortui, but its structure has not been determined [
1]. The pigments responsible for the red color of the cells have not been determined, but it may be predicted that they are carotenoids, probably bacterioruberins. Outer cell layers are probably proteinaceous. The presence of peptidoglycan has not been investigated, but is generally absent from members of this family
Halobacteriaceae.