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extremophile

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extremophile

Microbe able to thrive in extreme conditions, such as very high temperatures (thermophiles), low temperatures (psychrophiles), high acidity (acidophiles), or high alkalinity (alkaliphiles). Examples of extremophiles are found in both bacteria and Archaea.

Thermophiles live at temperatures above 45°C/113°F and some, known as hyperthermophiles, thrive at temperatures greater than 80°C/176°F, and are even found in sea water above its boiling point of 100°C/212°F, such as those living around deep-sea vents. The archaeon Sulfolobus acidocaldarius is a hyperthermopile that is also an acidophile. It lives in the hot sulphur springs of Yellowstone Park, Wyoming, USA.

In 2000, new species of psychrophiles were discovered living in Antarctica, where temperatures range between −85°C/−121°F and −13°C/−11°F.

Extremophiles are of commercial interest because they are able to continue producing their enzymes in conditions when other enzymes would have broken down. These extremozymes are able to catalyse chemical reactions for the biomedical and other industries at very high temperatures, for example.


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The NIEHS can fund novel methods of collection and cultivation of all types of potentially useful organisms; extremophile organisms, molecules, and processes represent only one example of a resource untapped.
The acritarch record of Australia indicates that pre- and post-Snowball populations are identical and do not indicate repopulation of marine areas by extremophiles that survived both catastrophic glaciation in hot springs and the brutal greenhouse conditions which followed (Grey et al.
Extremophiles 2004 American Society for Microbiology
 
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