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Still something to discover: novel insights into Escherichia coli phage diversity and taxonomy (2019)
Korf, Imke H. E. ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Adriaenssens, Evelien M. ; Kropinski, Andrew M. ; Nimtz, Manfred ; Rohde, Manfred ; van Raaij, Mark J. ; Wittmann, Johannes
The aim of this study was to gain further insight into the diversity of Escherichia coli phages followed by enhanced work on taxonomic issues in that field. Therefore, we present the genomic characterization and taxonomic classification of 50 bacteriophages against E. coli isolated from various sources, such as manure or sewage. All phages were examined for their host range on a set of different E. coli strains, originating, e.g., from human diagnostic laboratories or poultry farms. Transmission electron microscopy revealed a diversity of morphotypes (70% Myo-, 22% Sipho-, and 8% Podoviruses), and genome sequencing resulted in genomes sizes from ~44 to ~370 kb. Annotation and comparison with databases showed similarities in particular to T4- and T5-like phages, but also to less-known groups. Though various phages against E. coli are already described in literature and databases, we still isolated phages that showed no or only few similarities to other phages, namely phages Goslar, PTXU04, and KWBSE43-6. Genome-based phylogeny and classification of the newly isolated phages using VICTOR resulted in the proposal of new genera and led to an enhanced taxonomic classification of E. coli phages.
Proposal of a type strain for Frankia alni (Woronin 1866) Von Tubeuf 1895, emended description of Frankia alni, and recognition of Frankia casuarinae sp. nov. and Frankia elaeagni sp. nov. (2016)
Nouioui, Imen ; Ghodhbane-Gtari, Faten ; Montero-Calasanz, Maria del Carmen ; Göker, Markus ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Schumann, Peter ; Rohde, Manfred ; Goodfellow, Michael ; Fernandez, Maria P. ; Normand, Philippe ; Tisa, Louis S. ; Klenk, Hans-Peter ; Gtari, Maher
The landscape of genomic alterations across childhood cancers (2018)
Gröbner, Susanne N. ; Worst, Barbara C. ; Weischenfeldt, Joachim ; Buchhalter, Ivo ; Kleinheinz, Kortine ; Rudneva, Vasilisa A. ; Johann, Pascal-David ; Balasubramanian, Gnana Prakash ; Segura-Wang, Maia ; Brabetz, Sebastian ; Bender, Sebastian ; Hutter, Barbara ; Sturm, Dominik ; Pfaff, Elke ; Hübschmann, Daniel ; Zipprich, Gideon ; Heinold, Michael ; Eils, Jürgen ; Lawerenz, Christian ; Erkek, Serap ; Lambo, Sander ; Waszak, Sebastian ; Blattmann, Claudia ; Borkhardt, Arndt ; Kuhlen, Michaela ; Eggert, Angelika ; Fulda, Simone ; Gessler, Manfred ; Wegert, Jenny ; Kappler, Roland ; Baumhoer, Daniel ; Burdach, Stefan ; Kirschner-Schwabe, Renate ; Kontny, Udo ; Kulozik, Andreas E. ; Lohmann, Dietmar ; Hettmer, Simone ; Eckert, Cornelia ; Bielack, Stefan ; Nathrath, Michaela ; Niemeyer, Charlotte ; Richter, Günther H. ; Schulte, Johannes ; Siebert, Reiner ; Westermann, Frank ; Molenaar, Jan J. ; Vassal, Gilles ; Witt, Hendrik ; Burkhardt, Birgit ; Kratz, Christian P. ; Witt, Olaf ; van Tilburg, Cornelis M. ; Kramm, Christof M. ; Fleischhack, Gudrun ; Dirksen, Uta ; Rutkowski, Stefan ; Frühwald, Michael C. ; von Hoff, Katja ; Wolf, Stephan ; Klingebiel, Thomas ; Koscielniak, Ewa ; Landgraf, Pablo ; Koster, Jan ; Resnick, Adam C. ; Zhang, Jinghui ; Liu, Yanling ; Zhou, Xin ; Waanders, Angela J. ; Zwijnenburg, Danny A. ; Raman, Pichai ; Brors, Benedikt ; Weber, Ursula D. ; Northcott, Paul A. ; Pajtler, Kristian W. ; Kool, Marcel ; Piro, Rosario M. ; Korbel, Jan O. ; Schlesner, Matthias ; Eils, Roland ; Jones, David T. W. ; Lichter, Peter ; Chavez, Lukas ; Zapatka, Marc ; Pfister, Stefan M.
Comparing polysaccharide decomposition between the type strains Gramella echinicola KMM 6050T (DSM 19838T) and Gramella portivictoriae UST040801-001T (DSM 23547T), and emended description of Gramella echinicola Nedashkovskaya et al. 2005 emend. Shahina et al. 2014 and Gramella portivictoriae Lau et al. 2005 (2016)
Panschin, Irina ; Huang, Sixing ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Tindall, Brian J. ; Rohde, Manfred ; Verbarg, Susanne ; Lapidus, Alla ; Han, James ; Trong, Stephan ; Haynes, Matthew ; Reddy, T. B. K. ; Huntemann, Marcel ; Pati, Amrita ; Ivanova, Natalia N. ; Mavromatis, Konstantinos ; Markowitz, Victor ; Woyke, Tanja ; Göker, Markus ; Klenk, Hans-Peter ; Kyrpides, Nikos C. ; Hahnke, Richard L.
Strains of the genus Gramella (family Flavobacteriacae, phylum Bacteroidetes) were isolated from marine habitats such as tidal flat sediments, coastal surface seawater and sea urchins. Flavobacteriaceae have been shown to be involved in the decomposition of plant and algal polysaccharides. However, the potential to decompose polysaccharides may differ tremendously even between species of the same genus. Gramella echinicola KMM 6050T (DSM 19838T) and Gramella portivictoriae UST040801-001T (DSM 23547T) have genomes of similar lengths, similar numbers of protein coding genes and RNA genes. Both genomes encode for a greater number of peptidases compared to ’G. forsetii’. In contrast to the genome of ’G. forsetii’, both genomes comprised a smaller set of CAZymes. Seven polysaccharide utilization loci were identified in the genomes of DSM 19838T and DSM 23547T. Both Gramella strains hydrolyzed starch, galactomannan, arabinoxylan and hydroxyethyl-cellulose, but not pectin, chitosan and cellulose (Avicel). Galactan and xylan were hydrolyzed by strain DSM 19838T, whereas strain DSM 23547T hydrolyzed pachyman and carboxy-methyl cellulose. Conclusively, both Gramella type strains exhibit characteristic physiological, morphological and genomic differences that might be linked to their habitat. Furthermore, the identified enzymes mediating polysaccharide decomposition, are of biotechnological interest.
High-quality draft genome sequence of Flavobacterium suncheonense GH29-5T (DSM 17707T) isolated from greenhouse soil in South Korea, and emended description of Flavobacterium suncheonense GH29-5T (2016)
Tashkandy, Nisreen ; Sabban, Sari ; Fakieh, Mohammad ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Huang, Sixing ; Tindall, Brian J. ; Rohde, Manfred ; Baeshen, Mohammed N. ; Baeshen, Nabih A. ; Lapidus, Alla ; Copeland, Alex ; Pillay, Manoj ; Reddy, T. B. K. ; Huntemann, Marcel ; Pati, Amrita ; Ivanova, Natalia ; Markowitz, Victor ; Woyke, Tanja ; Göker, Markus ; Klenk, Hans-Peter ; Kyrpides, Nikos C. ; Hahnke, Richard L.
Flavobacterium suncheonense is a member of the family Flavobacteriaceae in the phylum Bacteroidetes. Strain GH29-5T (DSM 17707T) was isolated from greenhouse soil in Suncheon, South Korea. F. suncheonense GH29-5T is part of the G enomic E ncyclopedia of B acteria and A rchaea project. The 2,880,663 bp long draft genome consists of 54 scaffolds with 2739 protein-coding genes and 82 RNA genes. The genome of strain GH29-5T has 117 genes encoding peptidases but a small number of genes encoding carbohydrate active enzymes (51 CAZymes). Metallo and serine peptidases were found most frequently. Among CAZymes, eight glycoside hydrolase families, nine glycosyl transferase families, two carbohydrate binding module families and four carbohydrate esterase families were identified. Suprisingly, polysaccharides utilization loci (PULs) were not found in strain GH29-5T. Based on the coherent physiological and genomic characteristics we suggest that F. suncheonense GH29-5T feeds rather on proteins than saccharides and lipids.
Genome sequence of the chemoheterotrophic soil bacterium Saccharomonospora cyanea type strain (NA-134T) (2013)
Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Lu, Megan ; Huntemann, Marcel ; Lucas, Susan ; Lapidus, Alla ; Copeland, Alex ; Pitluck, Sam ; Goodwin, Lynne A. ; Han, Cliff ; Tapia, Roxanne ; Pötter, Gabriele ; Land, Miriam ; Ivanova, Natalia ; Rohde, Manfred ; Göker, Markus ; Detter, John C. ; Woyke, Tanja ; Kyrpides, Nikos C. ; Klenk, Hans-Peter
Saccharomonospora cyanea Runmao et al. 1988 is a member of the genus Saccharomonospora in the family Pseudonocardiaceae that is moderately well characterized at the genome level thus far. Members of the genus Saccharomonospora are of interest because they originate from diverse habitats, such as soil, leaf litter, manure, compost, surface of peat, moist, over-heated grain, and ocean sediment, where they probably play a role in the primary degradation of plant material by attacking hemicellulose. Species of the genus Saccharomonospora are usually Gram-positive, non-acid fast, and are classified among the actinomycetes. S. cyanea is characterized by a dark blue (= cyan blue) aerial mycelium. After S. viridis, S. azurea, and S. marina, S. cyanea is only the fourth member in the genus for which a completely sequenced (non-contiguous finished draft status) type strain genome will be published. Here we describe the features of this organism, together with the draft genome sequence, and annotation. The 5,408,301 bp long chromosome with its 5,139 protein-coding and 57 RNA genes was sequenced as part of the DOE funded Community Sequencing Program (CSP) 2010 at the Joint Genome Institute (JGI).
Genotype–phenotype correlations within the Geodermatophilaceae (2022)
Montero-Calasanz, Maria del Carmen ; Yaramis, Adnan ; Rohde, Manfred ; Schumann, Peter ; Klenk, Hans-Peter ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P.
The integration of genomic information into microbial systematics along with physiological and chemotaxonomic parameters provides for a reliable classification of prokaryotes. In silico analysis of chemotaxonomic traits is now being introduced to replace characteristics traditionally determined in the laboratory with the dual goal of both increasing the speed of the description of taxa and the accuracy and consistency of taxonomic reports. Genomics has already successfully been applied in the taxonomic rearrangement of Geodermatophilaceae (Actinomycetota) but in the light of new genomic data the taxonomy of the family needs to be revisited. In conjunction with the taxonomic characterisation of four strains phylogenetically located within the family, we conducted a phylogenetic analysis of the whole proteomes of the sequenced type strains and established genotype–phenotype correlations for traits related to chemotaxonomy, cell morphology and metabolism. Results indicated that the four isolates under study represent four novel species within the genus Blastococcus. Additionally, the genera Blastococcus, Geodermatophilus and Modestobacter were shown to be paraphyletic. Consequently, the new genera Trujillonella, Pleomorpha and Goekera were proposed within the Geodermatophilaceae and Blastococcus endophyticus was reclassified as Trujillonella endophytica comb. nov., Geodermatophilus daqingensis as Pleomorpha daqingensis comb. nov. and Modestobacter deserti as Goekera deserti comb. nov. Accordingly, we also proposed emended descriptions of Blastococcus aggregatus, Blastococcus jejuensis, Blastococcus saxobsidens and Blastococcus xanthilyniticus. In silico chemotaxonomic results were overall consistent with wet-lab results. Even though in silico discriminatory levels varied depending on the respective chemotaxonomic trait, this approach is promising for effectively replacing and/or complementing chemotaxonomic analyses at taxonomic ranks above the species level. Finally, interesting but previously overlooked insights regarding morphology and ecology were revealed by the presence of a repertoire of genes related to flagellum synthesis, chemotaxis, spore production and pilus assembly in all representatives of the family. A rich carbon metabolism including four different CO2 fixation pathways and a battery of enzymes able to degrade complex carbohydrates were also identified in Blastococcus genomes.
Genome-scale data call for a taxonomic rearrangement of Geodermatophilaceae (2017)
Montero-Calasanz, Maria del Carmen ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Zhang, Dao-Feng ; Yaramis, Adnan ; Rohde, Manfred ; Woyke, Tanja ; Kyrpides, Nikos C. ; Schumann, Peter ; Li, Wen-Jun ; Göker, Markus
Geodermatophilaceae (order Geodermatophilales, class Actinobacteria) form a comparatively isolated family within the phylum Actinobacteria and harbor many strains adapted to extreme ecological niches and tolerant against reactive oxygen species. Clarifying the evolutionary history of Geodermatophilaceae was so far mainly hampered by the insufficient resolution of the main phylogenetic marker in use, the 16S rRNA gene. In conjunction with the taxonomic characterisation of a motile and aerobic strain, designated YIM M13156T and phylogenetically located within the family, we here carried out a phylogenetic analysis of the genome sequences now available for the type strains of Geodermatophilaceae and re-analyzed the previously assembled phenotypic data. The results indicated that the largest genus, Geodermatophilus, is not monophyletic, hence the arrangement of the genera of Geodermatophilaceae must be reconsidered. Taxonomic markers such as polar lipids and fatty-acids profile, cellular features and temperature ranges are indeed heterogeneous within Geodermatophilus. In contrast to previous studies, we also address which of these features can be interpreted as apomorphies of which taxon, according to the principles of phylogenetic systematics. We thus propose a novel genus, Klenkia, with the type species Klenkia marina sp. nov. and harboring four species formerly assigned to Geodermatophilus, G. brasiliensis, G. soli, G. taihuensis, and G. terrae. Emended descriptions of all species of Geodermatophilaceae are provided for which type-strain genome sequences are publicly available. Our study again demonstrates that the principles of phylogenetic systematics can and should guide the interpretation of both genomic and phenotypic data.
First genome sequences of Achromobacter phages reveal new members of the N4 family (2014)
Wittmann, Johannes ; Dreiseikelmann, Brigitte ; Rohde, Manfred ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Bunk, Boyke ; Rohde, Christine
Background Multi-resistant Achromobacter xylosoxidans has been recognized as an emerging pathogen causing nosocomially acquired infections during the last years. Phages as natural opponents could be an alternative to fight such infections. Bacteriophages against this opportunistic pathogen were isolated in a recent study. This study shows a molecular analysis of two podoviruses and reveals first insights into the genomic structure of Achromobacter phages so far. Methods Growth curve experiments and adsorption kinetics were performed for both phages. Adsorption and propagation in cells were visualized by electron microscopy. Both phage genomes were sequenced with the PacBio RS II system based on single molecule, real-time (SMRT) technology and annotated with several bioinformatic tools. To further elucidate the evolutionary relationships between the phage genomes, a phylogenomic analysis was conducted using the genome Blast Distance Phylogeny approach (GBDP). Results In this study, we present the first detailed analysis of genome sequences of two Achromobacter phages so far. Phages JWAlpha and JWDelta were isolated from two different waste water treatment plants in Germany. Both phages belong to the Podoviridae and contain linear, double-stranded DNA with a length of 72329 bp and 73659 bp, respectively. 92 and 89 putative open reading frames were identified for JWAlpha and JWDelta, respectively, by bioinformatic analysis with several tools. The genomes have nearly the same organization and could be divided into different clusters for transcription, replication, host interaction, head and tail structure and lysis. Detailed annotation via protein comparisons with BLASTP revealed strong similarities to N4-like phages. Conclusions Analysis of the genomes of Achromobacter phages JWAlpha and JWDelta and comparisons of different gene clusters with other phages revealed that they might be strongly related to other N4-like phages, especially of the Escherichia group. Although all these phages show a highly conserved genomic structure and partially strong similarities at the amino acid level, some differences could be identified. Those differences, e.g. the existence of specific genes for replication or host interaction in some N4-like phages, seem to be interesting targets for further examination of function and specific mechanisms, which might enlighten the mechanism of phage establishment in the host cell after infection.
Genome sequence of the moderately thermophilic sulfur-reducing bacterium Thermanaerovibrio velox type strain (Z-9701T) and emended description of the genus Thermanaerovibrio (2013)
Palaniappan, Krishna ; Meier-Kolthoff, Jan P. ; Teshima, Hazuki ; Nolan, Matt ; Lapidus, Alla ; Tice, Hope ; Del Rio, Tijana Glavina ; Cheng, Jan-Fang ; Han, Cliff ; Tapia, Roxanne ; Goodwin, Lynne A. ; Pitluck, Sam ; Liolios, Konstantinos ; Mavromatis, Konstantinos ; Pagani, Ioanna ; Ivanova, Natalia ; Mikhailova, Natalia ; Pati, Amrita ; Chen, Amy ; Rohde, Manfred ; Mayilraj, Shanmugam ; Spring, Stefan ; Detter, John C. ; Göker, Markus ; Bristow, James ; Eisen, Jonathan A. ; Markowitz, Victor ; Hugenholtz, Philip ; Kyrpides, Nikos C. ; Klenk, Hans-Peter ; Woyke, Tanja
Thermanaerovibrio velox Zavarzina et al. 2000 is a member of the Synergistaceae, a family in the phylum Synergistetes that is already well-characterized at the genome level. Members of this phylum were described as Gram-negative staining anaerobic bacteria with a rod/vibrioid cell shape and possessing an atypical outer cell envelope. They inhabit a large variety of anaerobic environments including soil, oil wells, wastewater treatment plants and animal gastrointestinal tracts. They are also found to be linked to sites of human diseases such as cysts, abscesses, and areas of periodontal disease. The moderately thermophilic and organotrophic T. velox shares most of its morphologic and physiologic features with the closely related species, T. acidaminovorans. In addition to Su883T, the type strain of T. acidaminovorans, stain Z-9701T is the second type strain in the genus Thermanaerovibrio to have its genome sequence published. Here we describe the features of this organism, together with the non-contiguous genome sequence and annotation. The 1,880,838 bp long chromosome (non-contiguous finished sequence) with its 1,751 protein-coding and 59 RNA genes is a part of the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea project.
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