Haloarculaceae

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Haloarculaceae
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Archaea
Kingdom: Methanobacteriati
Phylum: Methanobacteriota
Class: Halobacteria
Order: Halobacteriales
Family: Haloarculaceae
Gupta et al. 2016[1]
Genera[1]

Haloarculaceae is a family of halophilic and mostly chemoorganotrophic archaea within the order Halobacteriales.[2][3][4] The type genus of this family is Haloarcula.[1] Its biochemical characteristics are the same as the order Halobacteriales.

The name Haloarculaceae is derived from the Latin term Haloarcula, referring to the type genus of the family and the suffix "-ceae," an ending used to denote a family. Together, Haloarculaceae refers to a family whose nomenclatural type is the genus Haloarcula.

As of 2021, Haloarculaceae contains 10 validly published genera.[1] This family can be molecularly distinguished from other Halobacteria by the presence of 19 conserved signature proteins (CSPs) and seven conserved signature indels (CSIs) present in the following proteins: acetylglutamate kinase, ribonuclease R, metallo-beta-lactamase, tRNA modifying enzyme, carbamoyl phosphate synthase large subunit and hypothetical proteins.[2]

Specific genera

Halocatena

Halocatena is a genus in this family. One of the species, Halocatena halophila (=Actinoarchaeum halophilum), is known for displaying "hyphae and spores" structure akin to the Actinomycetales.[5] The operon responsible for such structural differentation appears to be homologous to the Streptomycetes one and can compensate for the deletion of the bacterial version.[6]

Phylogeny

See also

References

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