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Authors Shimizu

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Shimizu, Michiru


Publications
2

CitationNamesAbstract
Discovery and genomics of H2-oxidizing/O2-reducing Deferribacterota ectosymbiotic with protists in the guts of termites and a Cryptocercus cockroach Maruoka et al. (2026). ISME Communications 6 (1) Termitispirillum Termitispirillum cryptocerci Ts Termitispirillaceae
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Nanobdella aerobiophila gen. nov., sp. nov., a thermoacidophilic, obligate ectosymbiotic archaeon, and proposal of Nanobdellaceae fam. nov., Nanobdellales ord. nov. and Nanobdellia class. nov Kato et al. (2022). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 72 (8) Nanobdella aerobiophila T Nanobdella Nanobdellaceae Nanobdellales Nanobdellia
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Discovery and genomics of H2-oxidizing/O2-reducing Deferribacterota ectosymbiotic with protists in the guts of termites and a Cryptocercus cockroach
Abstract Members of the phylum Deferribacterota inhabit diverse environments, but their symbiosis with protists has never been reported. We discovered an ectosymbiotic clade of Deferribacterota specifically associated with spirotrichonymphid protists in the guts of the termites Reticulitermes speratus and Hodotermopsis sjostedti and trichonymphid protists in the gut of the wood-feeding cockroach Cryptocercus punctulatus. The ectosymbiotic Deferribacterota were spiral shaped and attached to 16%–91% of the host protist cells. These formed a monophyletic cluster within an uncultured insect gut-associated family-level clade, which is sister to the vertebrate gut-associated family Mucispirillaceae. The complete genome of an ectosymbiotic Deferribacterota was obtained from a Trichonympha acuta cell in a C. punctulatus gut and analyzed together with a single-cell amplified genome of another ectosymbiotic Deferribacterota associated with Holomastigotes sp. in the gut of R. speratus. Genome analyses suggest that these Deferribacterota ferment monosaccharides and conduct fumarate and oxidative respiration with H2 as an electron donor. They thus possibly contribute to the removal of hydrogen and oxygen to protect the fermentative activity of the protist hosts. The ectosymbionts possess reduced signal transduction gene repertoires, implying that the association has provided a relatively stable environment for these bacteria. The ectosymbionts likely possess flagella with an unusually expanded number of flagellin variants up to 40, which may reflect an adaptation to their ectosymbiotic lifestyle. We propose a novel genus, Termitispirillum, for these ectosymbionts and a novel family, Termitispirillaceae, for the insect-gut clade, under SeqCode. Our findings provide new insights into the ecology and evolution of Deferribacterota.
Nanobdella aerobiophila gen. nov., sp. nov., a thermoacidophilic, obligate ectosymbiotic archaeon, and proposal of Nanobdellaceae fam. nov., Nanobdellales ord. nov. and Nanobdellia class. nov
A co-culture of a novel thermoacidophilic, obligate symbiotic archaeon, designated as strain MJ1T, with its specific host archaeon Metallosphaera sedula strain MJ1HA was obtained from a terrestrial hot spring in Japan. Strain MJ1T grew in the co-culture under aerobic conditions. Coccoid cells of strain MJ1T were 200–500 nm in diameter, and attached to the MJ1HA cells in the co-culture. The ranges and optima of the growth temperature and pH of strain MJ1T in the co-culture were 60–75 °C (optimum, 65–70 °C) and pH 1.0–4.0 (optimum, pH 2.5), respectively. Core lipids of dialkyl glycerol tetraethers (GDGT)−3 and GDGT-4 were highly abundant in MJ1T cells concentrated from the co-culture. Strain MJ1T has a small genome (0.67 Mbp) lacking genes for biosynthesis of essential biomolecules, such as nucleotides, lipids and ATP. The genomic DNA G+C content was 24.9 mol%. The 16S rRNA gene sequence of strain MJ1T was most closely related to that of the cultivated species, ‘Nanopusillus acidilobi’ strain N7A (85.8 % similarity). Based on phylogenetic and physiological characteristics, we propose the name Nanobdella aerobiophila gen. nov., sp. nov. to accommodate the strain MJ1T (=JCM 33616T=DSM 111728T). In addition, we propose the names Nanobdellaceae fam. nov., Nanobdellales ord. nov., and Nanobdellia class. nov. to accommodate the novel genus.
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