Archaeal Richmond Mine acidophilic nanoorganisms
Archaeal Richmond Mine acidophilic nanoorganisms (ARMAN) were first discovered in an extremely acidic mine located in northern California (
Richmond Mine at Iron Mountain) by Brett Baker in Jill Banfield's laboratory at the
University of California Berkeley. These novel groups of
archaea named ARMAN-1, ARMAN-2 (''
Candidatus Micrarchaeum acidiphilum'' ARMAN-2), and ARMAN-3 were missed by previous PCR-based surveys of the mine community because the ARMANs have several mismatches with commonly used
PCR primers for
16S rRNA genes. Baker ''et al.'' detected them in a later study using
shotgun sequencing of the community. The three groups were originally thought to represent three unique lineages deeply branched within the
Euryarchaeota, a subgroup of the
Archaea. However, based on a more complete archaeal genomic tree, they were assigned to a new superphylum named
DPANN. The ARMAN groups now comprise deeply divergent phyla named
Micrarchaeota and
Parvarchaeota. Their 16S rRNA genes differ by as much as 17% between the three groups. Prior to their discovery, all of the
Archaea shown to be associated with Iron Mountain belonged to the order
Thermoplasmatales (e.g., ''
Ferroplasma acidarmanus'').
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