Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
Extreme marine environments have been the subject of many studies and scientific
publications. For many years, these environmental niches, which are characterized by high or
low temperatures, high-pressure, low pH, high salt concentrations and also two or more extreme
parameters in combination, have been thought to be incompatible to any life forms. Thanks to new
technologies such as metagenomics, it is now possible to detect life in most extreme environments.
Starting from the discovery of deep sea hydrothermal vents up to the study of marine biodiversity,
new microorganisms have been identified, and their potential uses in several applied fields have
been outlined. Thermophile, halophile, alkalophile, psychrophile, piezophile and polyextremophile
microorganisms have been isolated from these marine environments; they proliferate thanks to
adaptation strategies involving diverse cellular metabolic mechanisms. Therefore, a vast number
of new biomolecules such as enzymes, polymers and osmolytes from the inhabitant microbial
community of the sea have been studied, and there is a growing interest in the potential returns of
several industrial production processes concerning the pharmaceutical, medical, environmental and
food fields.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
extremophiles; extreme marine habitats; enzymes; exopolysaccharides
Elenco autori:
Finore, Ilaria; Gioiello, Alessia; Poli, Annarita; Lama, Licia; Nicolaus, Barbara; Romano, Ida
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