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Authors Rodriguez-R

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Rodriguez-R, Luis M.


Publications
6

CitationNamesAbstract
A practical guide on environmental genomics for prokaryotic systematics Ernster, Rodriguez-R (2025). Systematic and Applied Microbiology 48 (5) Regnicoccus antarcticus Ts Regnicoccus
Andean soil-derived lignocellulolytic bacterial consortium as a source of novel taxa and putative plastic-active enzymes Díaz-García et al. (2024). Systematic and Applied Microbiology 47 (1) 16 Names
Corrigendum: Naming the unnamed: over 65,000 Candidatus names for unnamed Archaea and Bacteria in the Genome Taxonomy Database Pallen et al. (2023). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 73 (5)
SeqCode: a nomenclatural code for prokaryotes described from sequence data Hedlund et al. (2022). Nature Microbiology Kryptonium mobile Kryptoniaceae Kryptoniia Kryptoniales
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Naming the unnamed: over 65,000 Candidatus names for unnamed Archaea and Bacteria in the Genome Taxonomy Database Pallen et al. (2022). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 72 (9) “Afabia udivosa” “Afabia” “Afabiaceae” “Afabiales” “Afabiia” “Afabiota” “Paenistieleria bergensis”
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Ecogenomic characterization of widespread, closely-related SAR11 clades of the freshwater genus “Candidatus Fonsibacter” and proposal of Ca. Fonsibacter lacus sp. nov Tsementzi et al. (2019). Systematic and Applied Microbiology 42 (4) “Fontibacterium lacus” Fontibacterium

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SeqCode: a nomenclatural code for prokaryotes described from sequence data
AbstractMost prokaryotes are not available as pure cultures and therefore ineligible for naming under the rules and recommendations of the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes (ICNP). Here we summarize the development of the SeqCode, a code of nomenclature under which genome sequences serve as nomenclatural types. This code enables valid publication of names of prokaryotes based upon isolate genome, metagenome-assembled genome or single-amplified genome sequences. Otherwise, it is similar to the ICNP with regard to the formation of names and rules of priority. It operates through the SeqCode Registry (https://seqco.de/), a registration portal through which names and nomenclatural types are registered, validated and linked to metadata. We describe the two paths currently available within SeqCode to register and validate names, includingCandidatusnames, and provide examples for both. Recommendations on minimal standards for DNA sequences are provided. Thus, the SeqCode provides a reproducible and objective framework for the nomenclature of all prokaryotes regardless of cultivability and facilitates communication across microbiological disciplines.
Naming the unnamed: over 65,000 Candidatus names for unnamed Archaea and Bacteria in the Genome Taxonomy Database
Thousands of new bacterial and archaeal species and higher-level taxa are discovered each year through the analysis of genomes and metagenomes. The Genome Taxonomy Database (GTDB) provides hierarchical sequence-based descriptions and classifications for new and as-yet-unnamed taxa. However, bacterial nomenclature, as currently configured, cannot keep up with the need for new well-formed names. Instead, microbiologists have been forced to use hard-to-remember alphanumeric placeholder labels. Here, we exploit an approach to the generation of well-formed arbitrary Latinate names at a scale sufficient to name tens of thousands of unnamed taxa within GTDB. These newly created names represent an important resource for the microbiology community, facilitating communication between bioinformaticians, microbiologists and taxonomists, while populating the emerging landscape of microbial taxonomic and functional discovery with accessible and memorable linguistic labels.
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