Publications
4368

Sort by date names
Browse by authors subjects journals

Wolbachia causes cytoplasmic incompatibility but not male‐killing in a grain pest beetle

Citation
Kiefer et al. (2022). Molecular Ecology 31 (24)
Names
Shikimatogenerans silvanidophilus Ts
Abstract
AbstractThe endosymbiotic Wolbachia is one of the most common intracellular bacteria known in arthropods and nematodes. Its ability for reproductive manipulation can cause unequal inheritance to male and female offspring, allowing the manipulator to spread, but potentially also impact the evolutionary dynamics of infected hosts. Estimated to be present in up to 66% of insect species, little is known about the phenotypic impact of Wolbachia within the order Coleoptera. Here, we describe the repro
Text

An Improved Recombinase Polymerase Amplification Coupled with Lateral Flow Assay for Rapid Field Detection of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’

Citation
Rattner et al. (2022). Plant Disease 106 (12)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
Huanglongbing (HLB) is a destructive citrus disease that affects citrus production worldwide. ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ (CLas), a phloem-limited bacterium, is the associated causal agent of HLB. The current standard for detection of CLas is real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR) using either the CLas 16S rRNA gene or the ribonucleotide reductase (RNR) gene-specific primers/probe. qPCR requires well-equipped laboratories and trained personnel, which is not convenient f
Text

The ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma tritici’ effector <scp>SWP12</scp> degrades the transcription factor <scp>TaWRKY74</scp> to suppress wheat resistance

Citation
Bai et al. (2022). The Plant Journal 112 (6)
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma tritici
Abstract
SUMMARY‘Candidatus Phytoplasma tritici’ (‘Ca. P. tritici’) is an insect‐borne obligate pathogen that infects wheat (Triticum aestivum) causing wheat blue dwarf disease, and leads to yield losses. SWP12 is a potential effector secreted by ‘Ca. P. tritici’ that manipulates host processes to create an environment conducive to phytoplasma colonization, but the detailed mechanism of action remains to be investigated. In this study, the expression of SWP12 weakened the basal immunity of Nicotiana bent
Text

A synthetic ‘essentialome’ for axenic culturing of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’

Citation
Cai et al. (2022). BMC Research Notes 15 (1)
Names
Liberibacter Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
Abstract Objective ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ (CLas) is associated with the devastating citrus ‘greening’ disease. All attempts to achieve axenic growth and complete Koch’s postulates with CLas have failed to date, at best yielding complex cocultures with very low CLas titers detectable only by PCR. Reductive genome evolution has rendered all pathogenic ‘Ca. Liberibacter’ spp. deficient in multiple key biosynthetic, metabolic and structural pathways that
Text

Ethylmalonyl-CoA pathway involved in polyhydroxyvalerate synthesis in Candidatus Contendobacter

Citation
Zhao et al. (2022). AMB Express 12 (1)
Names
Ca. Contendobacter
Abstract
AbstractHere a stable glycogen accumulating organisms (GAOs) system was operated by anaerobic–aerobic mode in the sequencing batch reactor. We focused on the metabolic mechanisms of PHAs storage from GAOs. Our system showed the classic characteristic of glycogen accumulating metabolism (GAM). Glycogen consumption was followed by acetic acid uptake to synthesize poly-β-hydroxyalkanoates (PHAs) during the anaerobic period, and glycogen was synthesized by PHAs degradation in the aerobic stage. Micr
Text

Vulcanimicrobium alpinus gen. nov. sp. nov., the first cultivated representative of the candidate phylum “Eremiobacterota”, is a metabolically versatile aerobic anoxygenic phototroph

Citation
Yabe et al. (2022). ISME Communications 2 (1)
Names
Vulcanimicrobiales Vulcanimicrobium Vulcanimicrobium alpinum T
Abstract
Abstract The previously uncultured phylum “Candidatus Eremiobacterota” is globally distributed and often abundant in oligotrophic environments. Although it includes lineages with the genetic potential for photosynthesis, one of the most important metabolic pathways on Earth, the absence of pure cultures has limited further insights into its ecological and physiological traits. We report the first successful isolation of a “Ca. Eremiobacterota” strain from a fumarolic ice cave on M
Text

Genomic diversity and biosynthetic capabilities of sponge-associated chlamydiae

Citation
Dharamshi et al. (2022). The ISME Journal 16 (12)
Names
“Parasimkaniaceae”
Abstract
Abstract Sponge microbiomes contribute to host health, nutrition, and defense through the production of secondary metabolites. Chlamydiae, a phylum of obligate intracellular bacteria ranging from animal pathogens to endosymbionts of microbial eukaryotes, are frequently found associated with sponges. However, sponge-associated chlamydial diversity has not yet been investigated at the genomic level and host interactions thus far remain unexplored. Here, we sequenced the microbiomes
Text

Occurrence of ‘Candidatus Mycoplasma haemosuis’ in fattening pigs, sows and piglets in Germany using a novel gap-based quantitative real-time PCR assay

Citation
Ade et al. (2022). BMC Veterinary Research 18 (1)
Names
Ca. Mycoplasma haemosuis
Abstract
Abstract Background The appearance of the novel porcine haemotrophic mycoplasma (HM) species ‘Candidatus Mycoplasma haemosuis’ was reported in apparently healthy but also in clinically sick animals in China, Korea and in a case report from Germany. Outside of Asia, however, nothing further is known about the frequency of ‘Ca. M. haemosuis’ in pigs to date. To investigate the distribution of this novel HM species in Germany, fattening pigs, sows and pre-suckling pi
Text