ThermoBase: A database of the phylogeny and physiology of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic organisms

Author:

DiGiacomo JulianaORCID,McKay Christopher,Davila Alfonso

Abstract

Thermophiles and hyperthermophiles are those organisms which grow at high temperature (> 40°C). The unusual properties of these organisms have received interest in multiple fields of biological research, and have found applications in biotechnology, especially in industrial processes. However, there are few listings of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic organisms and their relevant environmental and physiological data. Such repositories can be used to standardize definitions of thermophile and hyperthermophile limits and tolerances and would mitigate the need for extracting organism data from diverse literature sources across multiple, sometimes loosely related, research fields. Therefore, we have developed ThermoBase, a web-based and freely available database which currently houses comprehensive descriptions for 1238 thermophilic or hyperthermophilic organisms. ThermoBase reports taxonomic, metabolic, environmental, experimental, and physiological information in addition to literature resources. This includes parameters such as coupling ions for chemiosmosis, optimal pH and range, optimal temperature and range, optimal pressure, and optimal salinity. The database interface allows for search features and sorting of parameters. As such, it is the goal of ThermoBase to facilitate and expedite hypothesis generation, literature research, and understanding relating to thermophiles and hyperthermophiles within the scientific community in an accessible and centralized repository. ThermoBase is freely available online at the Astrobiology Habitable Environments Database (AHED; https://ahed.nasa.gov), at the Database Center for Life Science (TogoDB; http://togodb.org/db/thermobase), and in the S1 File.

Funder

NASA Ames Research Center

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference19 articles.

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4. The universal ancestor was a thermophile or a hyperthermophile: Tests and further evidence;M. Giulio;Journal of Theoretical Biology,2003

5. Deep phylogeny—how a tree can help characterize early life on Earth;EA Gaucher;Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology,2009

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