
C Michael Hogan
Editor:
Emily Monosson
Source:
Encyclopedia of Earth
Archaea are a domain of single-celled microorganisms. They have no cell nucleus or any other organelles inside their cells. In the past Archaea were classified as an unusual group of bacteria and named archaebacteria, but since the Archaea have an independent evolutionary history and manifest numerous 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 primary branches of evolutionary descent are the Archaea, Eukarya and Bacteria. Archaea are further divided into four recognized phyla, although other phyla may exist. Of these groups the Crenarchaeota and the Euryarchaeota are most intensively studied. Classifying the archaea is somewhat challenging, since the vast majority have never been studied, and have chiefly been detected by analysis of their nucleic acids in samples from the environment.
Archaea replicate asexually in a process known as binary fission. Archaea achieve a swimming motility via one or more tail-like flagellae. Many archaeans are extremophiles, achieving wide environmental tolerance of temperature, salinity, and even radioactive environments. Archaea are thought to be significant in global geochemical cycling, since they comprise an estimated 20 percent of the world's biomass; however, very little is known about the domain, especially marine and deep-sea benthic varieties.
Evolution
Taxonomy
The greatest remaining puzzle is whether to acknowledge species within the domain of archaea. While morphological and DNA findings support the recognition of species, it is not clear that significant gene transfer is prohibited, thereby annihilating the validity of species. In any case, in the present treatment we shall allow the attribution of species, if for no other reason than to follow published research designations and for simplicity of naming.
General morphology
Genus Pyrodictium archaea form an elaborate multicell colony manifesting arrays of slender elongated hollow tubes termed cannulae that protrude from the cellular surface and connect into a dense agglomeration; this protruding form appears to encourage connection or nutrient exchange with neighboring cells of the same genus.
Archaeal flagella function like their bacterial counterparts, with elongated stalks driven by rotatory motors at the base. The motors themselves are powered by the electrochemical gradient across the membrane. However, archaeal and bacterial flagella came from different ancestors. The bacterial flagellum is hollow and is assembled by subunits moving up the central pore to the tip of the flagella, while archaeal flagella are constructed from addition of subunits at the base.
Stereochemistry of the glycerol group is the reverse of that found in other organisms. This implies that archaea use wholely different enzymes for synthesizing phospholipids than bacteria and eukaryotes. Such enzymes developed in very ancient geological times, suggesting an early split from the other two domains.
In some archaea the lipid bilayer is replaced by a monolayer, in which tails of two independent phospholipid molecules are fused into a single molecule with two polar heads. This fusion may make their membranes more rigid and better able to resist harsh environments. Ferroplasma is an example—this organism's survival in its highly acidic habitat is abetted by such tail fusion. Archea lipid tails are chemically distinct from other organisms.
Archaea lipids are based upon the isoprene sidechain: they are long chains with complex side-chains and often cyclopropane or cyclohexane 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 aid archaean membranes from leaking at high temperatures.
Many fundamental metabolic pathways are shared between all forms of life. As a case in point, archaea invoke a modified form of glycolysis and either a complete or partial citric acid cycle. These likenesses to other organisms reflect archaean early origins as well as archaean high metabolic efficiency.
A vast variety of chemical reactions are applied by archaea in supporting their metabolic behavior. Employing a host of energy sources, these reactions can be grouped into nutritional groups. In some cases inorganic compounds (e.g., ammonia and sulphur) supply the energy to archaeans known as lithotrophs. The other set of archaea employ the sun's energy; while not engaging in actual oxygen-producing photosynthesis, this archaean group is known as the phototrophs. (No archaea are known to use photosynthesis.) Phototrophic archaea use the sun's energy to produce chemical energy in the form of ATP. In the Halobacteria, light-activated ion pumps like bacteriorhodopsin produce ion gradients by pumping ions out of the cell through the plasma membrane. The energy stored in such electrochemical gradients is subsequently converted into ATP by ATP synthase in a process that is a form of photophosphorylation. The ability of these light-driven pumps to transport ions across membranes depends on sunlight-driven alterations in the structure of a retinol cofactor embedded in the protein center.
Some swamp-dwelling archaea thrive in anaerobic settings; in fact, this primitive form of metabolism may have powered the first free-living organism. Such methanogenic metabolism relies upon carbon dioxide as an electron acceptor to oxidize hydrogen. Methanogenesis invokes a gamut of coenzymes unique to these archaea, including coenzyme M and methanofuran. Sometimes various alcohols, and acetic or formic acid, are employed as methanogenic electron acceptors. These reactions are common in intestine-dwelling archaea. Acetic acid is also decomposed into methane and carbon dioxide by acetotrophic archaea. These acetotrophs are archaea in the order Methanosarcinales, and are a major part of the ecological micro-organism communities that produce biogas.
Having no cell nucleus, archaea do not reproduce via mitosis; rather, they procreate using a process called binary fission. In this binary fission process, archaeal DNA replicates, and the two strands are pulled apart as the cell grows. In some cases more than two daughter chromosomes can be created and subsequently pull apart, in a process called multiple fission.
Some Haloarchaea undergo phenotypic switching and grow as several different cell types, including thick-walled structures that are highly resistant to osmotic shock. These thickened walls permit survival under hyposaline (low salt) circumstances, but these alternative phenotypes are not actual reproductive structures—rather, they may assist the archaea in reaching new habitats.
Halophiles, including the genus Halobacterium, survive in hypersaline environments such as salt lakes, and can outcompete bacterial counterparts at salinities greater than 20 percent. Thermophiles grow best at temperatures above 45ºC, in locales such as hot springs; hyperthermophilic archaea grow optimally at temperatures greater than 80ºC. Strain 166 of the archaean Methanopyrus kandleri survives at 122ºC, the highest recorded temperature for any organism.
References
- C.R.Woese and G.Fox. 1977. Phylogenetic structure of the prokaryotic domain: the primary kingdoms. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. |vol 74, issue 11
- C.R.Woese, O.Kandler and M.L.Wheelis. 1990. Towards a natural system of organisms: proposal for the domains Archaea, Bacteria, and Eucarya. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science
- J.Schopf. 2006. Fossil evidence of Archaean life. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol. Sci. vol 361, issue 1470
- Morphology
- Noel Krieg. 2005. Bergey’s Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. USA: Springer. ISBN 978-0-387-24143-2
- F.Hara, K.Yamashiro, N.Nemoto et al. 2007. An actin homolog of the archaeon Thermoplasma acidophilum that retains the ancient characteristics of eukaryotic actin. J. Bacteriol. 189 (5): 2039–45.
- L.Hall-Stoodley, J.W.Costerton and P.Stoodley. 2004. Bacterial biofilms: from the natural environment to infectious diseases. Nat. Rev. Microbiol. vol 2, issue 2
- Reproduction
- L.M.Kelman and Z.Kelman. 2004. Multiple origins of replication in archaea. Trends Microbiol. vol 12, issue 9
- R.U.Onyenwoke, J.A.Brill, K.Farahi and J.Wiegel. 2004. Sporulation genes in members of the low G+C Gram-type-positive phylogenetic branch (Firmicutes). Arch. Microbiol. vol 182, issues 2–3
- Ecology
- N.A.Kostrikina, I.S.Zvyagintseva and V.I.Duda. 1991. Cytological peculiarities of some extremely halophilic soil archaeobacteria. Arch. Microbiol. vol 156, issue 5
- E.F.DeLong and N.R.Pace. 2001. Environmental diversity of bacteria and archaea. Syst. Biol. vol 50, issue 4
- P.López-García, A.López-López, D.Moreira and F.Rodríguez-Valera. 2001. Diversity of free-living prokaryotes from a deep-sea site at the Antarctic Polar Front. FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. vol 36 issue 2–3
- Jan Sapp. 2009. The New Foundations of Evolution. Oxford University Press. ASIN B002FU5O1I
Available under CC BY-SA 2.5
Citation:
C Michael Hogan (Lead Author);Emily Monosson (Topic Editor) "Archaea". In: Encyclopedia of Earth. Eds. Cutler J. Cleveland (Washington, D.C.: Environmental Information Coalition, National Council for Science and the Environment). [First published in the Encyclopedia of Earth March 25, 2010; Last revised Date August 23, 2011; Retrieved September 27, 2012 Encyclopedia of Earth.

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