05254nam 2200661 a 450 991081367220332120240516184316.01-118-39411-91-118-39414-31-283-70546-X1-118-39412-7(CKB)2670000000271784(EBL)947707(OCoLC)793099641(SSID)ssj0000754625(PQKBManifestationID)11496612(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000754625(PQKBWorkID)10726154(PQKB)11484016(MiAaPQ)EBC947707(DLC) 2012018153(Au-PeEL)EBL947707(CaPaEBR)ebr10613590(CaONFJC)MIL401796(EXLCZ)99267000000027178420120502d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrExtremophiles sustainable resources and biotechnological implications /edited by Om V. Singh1st ed.Hoboken, N.J. Wiley-Blackwellc20131 online resource (472 p.)Includes index.1-118-10300-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.EXTREMOPHILES; Contents; Contributors; Introduction; 1 MOLECULAR EVOLUTION OF EXTREMOPHILES; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Molecular Evolution of Thermophiles; 1.2.1 Habitat; 1.2.2 Cellular Organization; 1.2.3 Genome; 1.2.4 Proteome; 1.3 Molecular Evolution of Psychrophiles; 1.3.1 Habitat; 1.3.2 Cellular Organization; 1.3.3 Genome; 1.3.4 Proteome; 1.4 Molecular Evolution of Halophiles; 1.4.1 Habitat; 1.4.2 Cellular Organization; 1.4.3 Genome; 1.4.4 Proteome; 1.5 Molecular Evolution of Alkaliphiles; 1.5.1 Habitat; 1.5.2 Cellular Organization; 1.5.3 Genome; 1.5.4 Proteome1.6 Molecular Evolution of Acidophiles1.6.1 Habitat; 1.6.2 Cellular Organization; 1.6.3 Genome; 1.6.4 Proteome; 1.7 Molecular Evolution of Barophiles; 1.7.1 Habitat; 1.7.2 Cellular Organization; 1.7.3 Genome; 1.7.4 Proteome; 1.8 Engineering Extremophiles; 1.8.1 Microbiology; 1.8.2 Molecular Biology; 1.8.3 Bioinformatics; 1.9 Case Studies; 1.9.1 Biofuel Production; 1.9.2 Bioremediation; 1.9.3 Pesticide Biodegradation; 1.9.4 Escherichia coli: A Candidate Extremophile; 1.9.5 Oil-Spill-Cleaning Bacteria; 1.9.6 Potential Applications and Benefits1.10 Implications of Engineered Extremophiles on Ecology, Environment, and Health1.11 Conclusions and Recommendations; References; 2 ATTAINING EXTREMOPHILES AND EXTREMOLYTES: METHODOLOGIES AND LIMITATIONS; 2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Extremophiles: Types and Diversity; 2.2.1 Thermophiles; 2.2.2 Psychrophiles; 2.2.3 Halophiles; 2.2.4 Alkaliphiles; 2.2.5 Acidophiles; 2.2.6 Barophiles; 2.3 Extremolytes; 2.3.1 Production and Purification of Extremolytes; 2.3.2 Detection, Identification, and Quantification of Extremolytes; 2.3.3 Limitations; 2.4 Conclusions; References3 STRATEGIES FOR THE ISOLATION AND CULTIVATION OF HALOPHILIC MICROORGANISMS3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Thalassohaline and Athalassohaline Hypersaline Environments; 3.3 Case Studies; 3.3.1 Isolation of Aerobic Chemoheterotrophic Archaea from Solar Salterns; 3.3.2 Magnesium-Requiring and Magnesium-Tolerant Archaea from the Dead Sea; 3.3.3 Isolation of Acidophilic Halophilic Archaea; 3.3.4 Isolation of Unusual Anaerobic Halophiles from Deep-Sea Brines; 3.3.5 Isolation of Polyextremophilic Anaerobic Halophiles; 3.3.6 Isolation of Halophilic Microorganisms Associated with Plants and Animals3.3.7 Isolation of Halophilic Archaea from Low-Salt Environments3.4 The Upper Salinity Limits of Different Types of Energy Generation; 3.5 Final Comments; References; 4 HALOPHILIC PROPERTIES AND THEIR MANIPULATION AND APPLICATION; 4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Industrial Applications of Halophilic Organisms and Their Proteins; 4.3 Extreme and Moderate Halophiles and Their Proteins; 4.4 Generation of Low-Salt Stable Extreme-Halophilic Proteins; 4.5 Interconversion of Halophilic and Nonhalophilic Proteins; 4.5.1 Dimer-Tetramer Conversion of HaNDK and PaNDK; 4.5.2 Generation of Halophilic PaNDK4.6 Soluble Expression of Recombinant Proteins Explores the utility and potential of extremophiles in sustainability and biotechnology Many extremophilic bio-products are already used as life-saving drugs. Until recently, however, the difficulty of working with these microbes has discouraged efforts to develop extremophilic microbes as potential drug reservoirs of the future. Recent technological advances have opened the door to exploring these organisms anew as sources of products that might prove useful in clinical and environmental biotechnology and drug development. Extremophiles features outstanding articlExtreme environmentsMicrobiologyMicrobial biotechnologyExtreme environmentsMicrobiology.Microbial biotechnology.578.75/8Singh Om V634269MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910813672203321Extremophiles4050657UNINA