Two novel cell-wall-less, acidophilic, mesophilic, organotrophic and facultatively anaerobic archaeal strains were isolated from acidic streamers formed on the surfaces of copper-orecontaining sulfidic deposits in south-west Spain and North Wales, UK. Cells of the strains varied from 0.1 to 2 mm in size and were pleomorphic, with a tendency to form filamentous structures. The optimal pH and temperature for growth for both strains were 1.0-1.2 and 37-40 8C, with the optimal substrates for growth being beef extract (3 g l
21) for strain S5 T and beef extract with tryptone (3 and 1 g l
21, respectively) for strain PM4. The lipid composition was dominated by intact polar lipids consisting of a glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraether (GDGT) core attached to predominantly glycosidic polar headgroups. In addition, free GDGT and small relative amounts of intact and core diether lipids were present. Strains S5T and PM4 possessed mainly menaquinones with minor fractions of thermoplasmaquinones. The DNA G+C content was 37.3 mol% in strain S5 T and 37.16 mol% for strain PM4. A similarity matrix of 16S rRNA gene sequences (identical for both strains) showed their affiliation to the order Thermoplasmatales, with 73.9-86.3 % identity with sequences from members of the order with validly published names. The average nucleotide identity between genomes of the strains determined in silico was 98.75 %, suggesting, together with the 16S rRNA gene-based phylogenetic analysis, that the strains belong to the same species. A novel family, Cuniculiplasmataceae fam. nov., genus Cuniculiplasma gen. nov. and species Cuniculiplasma divulgatum sp. nov. are proposed based on the phylogenetic, chemotaxonomic analyses and physiological properties of the two isolates, S5 T and PM4 (5JCM 306415VKM B-2940). TheThe first genus and species of the Thermoplasmatales, Thermoplasma acidophilum, was described in 1970 (Darland et al., 1970), followed 25 years later by the genus Picrophilus Schleper et al., 1995). Since then, the taxa Ferroplasma (Golyshina et al., 2000), Thermogymnomonas acidicola (Itoh et al., 2007) and Acidiplasma (Golyshina et al., 2009) were described in the first decade of the 21st century. All members of the Thermoplasmatales are characterized as micro-organisms that are difficult to isolate, having extremely acidic pH optima for growth (among the lowest known), with their cells being typically pleomorphic (with the only exception being members of Picrophilus), as a consequence of the lack of an intact cell wall.Abbreviations: GDD, glycerol dibiphytanyl diether; GDGT, glycerol dibiphytanyl glycerol tetraether; IPL, intact polar lipid.The GenBank/EMBL/DDBJ accession numbers for the 16S rRNA gene sequences of strains PM4 and S5 T are KT005320 and KT005321.