SeqCode Logo SeqCode Registry
cognitis nomina
  • About
  • Search
  • •
  • Login
  • Register
Authors Liu

JSON
See as cards

Liu, Shuang-Jiang


Publications
3

CitationNamesAbstract
Curvibacter soli sp. nov., Extensimonas soli sp. nov., Pseudarthrobacter naphthalenicus sp. nov. and Terripilifer ovatus gen. nov., sp. nov., four new species isolated from polluted soil Liu et al. (2025). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 75 (3) Terripilifer
Text
CandidatusKaistella beijingensis sp. nov., Isolated from a Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant, Is Involved in Sludge Foaming Song et al. (2021). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 87 (24) Ca. Kaistella beijingensis
Text
Enlightening the taxonomy darkness of human gut microbiomes with a cultured biobank Liu et al. (2021). Microbiome 9 (1) “Lachnospira hominis HOMONYM_1”
Text

Curvibacter soli sp. nov., Extensimonas soli sp. nov., Pseudarthrobacter naphthalenicus sp. nov. and Terripilifer ovatus gen. nov., sp. nov., four new species isolated from polluted soil
A taxonomic study was conducted on four bacterial strains isolated from the soil of a coking plant. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the four strains belonged to three families: Comamonadaceae, Micrococcaceae and Roseiarcaceae. Identification of the 16S rRNA gene exhibited that their sequence similarities were between 94.96 and 98.98% when compared to known and validly nominated species. Their genomes ranged from 3.4 to 7.2 Mb, with DNA G+C molar contents varying from 62.3 to 67.2%. The average nucleotide identities ranged from 71.4 to 92.3%, and digital DNA–DNA hybridization values were 19.7–47.0% when comparing them with closely related type species, supporting the classification of these four strains. Functional analysis demonstrated that strain H3Y2-7T was robustly resistant to chromate (VI) and arsenite (III) and was able to grow on aromatic compounds including naphthalene as carbon sources even in the presence of chromate (VI). These features reflect its ability to treat combined pollutants and adapt to a polluted environment. Based on the analysis of polyphasic taxonomy, we propose the four bacterial strains representing novel species, namely Curvibacter soli sp. nov. (type strain H39-3-26T=JCM 36178T=CGMCC 1.61344T), Extensimonas soli sp. nov. (type strain H3M7-6T=JCM 36176T=CGMCC 1.61336T), Pseudarthrobacter naphthalenicus sp. nov. (type strain H3Y2-7T=JCM 36482T=CGMCC 1.61323T) and Terripilifer ovatus gen. nov., sp. nov. (type strain H3SJ34-1T=JCM 36465T=CGMCC 1.61333T).
CandidatusKaistella beijingensis sp. nov., Isolated from a Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plant, Is Involved in Sludge Foaming
Biological foaming or scumming is a sludge separation problem that has become the subject of major concern for long-term stable activated sludge operation in decades. Biological foaming was considered induced by foaming bacteria.
Enlightening the taxonomy darkness of human gut microbiomes with a cultured biobank
AbstractBackgroundIn gut microbiome studies, the cultured gut microbial resource plays essential roles, such as helping to unravel gut microbial functions and host-microbe interactions. Although several major studies have been performed to elucidate the cultured human gut microbiota, up to 70% of the Unified Human Gastrointestinal Genome species have not been cultured to date. Large-scale gut microbial isolation and identification as well as availability to the public are imperative for gut microbial studies and further characterizing human gut microbial functions.ResultsIn this study, we constructed a human Gut Microbial Biobank (hGMB; homepage:hgmb.nmdc.cn) through the cultivation of 10,558 isolates from 31 sample mixtures of 239 fresh fecal samples from healthy Chinese volunteers, and deposited 1170 strains representing 400 different species in culture collections of the International Depository Authority for long-term preservation and public access worldwide. Following the rules of the International Code of Nomenclature of Prokaryotes, 102 new species were characterized and denominated, while 28 new genera and 3 new families were proposed. hGMB represented over 80% of the common and dominant human gut microbial genera and species characterized from global human gut 16S rRNA gene amplicon data (n= 11,647) and cultured 24 “most-wanted” and “medium priority” taxa proposed by the Human Microbiome Project. We in total sequenced 115 genomes representing 102 novel taxa and 13 previously known species. Further in silico analysis revealed that the newly sequenced hGMB genomes represented 22 previously uncultured species in the Unified Human Gastrointestinal Genome (UHGG) and contributed 24 representatives of potentially “dark taxa” that had not been discovered by UHGG. The nonredundant gene catalogs generated from the hGMB genomes covered over 50% of the functionally known genes (KEGG orthologs) in the largest global human gut gene catalogs and approximately 10% of the “most wanted” functionally unknown proteins in the FUnkFams database.ConclusionsA publicly accessible human Gut Microbial Biobank (hGMB) was established that contained 1170 strains and represents 400 human gut microbial species. hGMB expands the gut microbial resources and genomic repository by adding 102 novel species, 28 new genera, 3 new families, and 115 new genomes of human gut microbes.
Search