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Studies on seed transmission of “ Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum” in pepper and its impact on plant emergence

Citation
Workneh et al. (2022). Plant Pathology 71 (4)
Names
“Liberibacter solanacearum”
Abstract
Abstract “ Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum” (Lso), transmitted by the potato psyllid ( Bactericera cockerelli ), is the causal agent of potato zebra chip, but can also infect other solanaceous plants, including peppers. Studies were conducted to investigate whether Lso could be transmitted to the next generation of plants through seeds from infected pepper plants. In 2014,
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Cultivation and metabolic insights of an uncultured clade, Bacteroidetes <scp>VC2</scp> .1 Bac22 ( Candidatus Sulfidibacteriales ord. nov.), from deep‐sea hydrothermal vents

Citation
Leng et al. (2022). Environmental Microbiology 24 (5)
Names
Ca. Sulfidibacteriales
Abstract
Summary Bacteroidetes VC2.1 Bac22 (referred to as VC2.1) is an uncultured clade that is widely distributed in marine ecosystems, including hydrothermal vents, oxygen‐minimum zones and other anoxic, sulfide‐rich environments. However, the lack of cultured representatives and sequenced genomes of VC2.1 limit our understanding of its physiology, metabolism and ecological functions. Here, we obtained a stable co‐culture of VC2.1 with autotrophic microbes by est
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Into the darkness: the ecologies of novel ‘microbial dark matter’ phyla in an Antarctic lake

Citation
Williams et al. (2022). Environmental Microbiology 24 (5)
Names
“Hinthialibacterota” “Auribacterota” “Electryoneota” “Lernaellota” “Hinthialibacter”
Abstract
Summary Uncultivated microbial clades (‘microbial dark matter’) are inferred to play important but uncharacterized roles in nutrient cycling. Using Antarctic lake (Ace Lake, Vestfold Hills) metagenomes, 12 metagenome‐assembled genomes (MAGs; 88%–100% complete) were generated for four ‘dark matter’ phyla: six MAGs from Candidatus Auribacterota (=Aureabacteria, SURF‐CP‐2), inferred to be hydrogen‐ and sulfide‐producing
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Metagenomic insights into the environmental adaptation and metabolism of Candidatus Haloplasmatales, one archaeal order thriving in saline lakes

Citation
Zhou et al. (2022). Environmental Microbiology 24 (5)
Names
Haloplasmatales
Abstract
Summary The KTK 4A‐related Thermoplasmata thrives in the sediment of saline lakes; however, systematic research on its taxonomy, environmental adaptation and metabolism is lacking. Here, we detected this abundant lineage in the sediment of five artificially separated ponds (salinity 7.0%–33.0%) within a Chinese soda‐saline lake using culture‐independent metagenomics and archaeal 16S rRNA gene amplicons. The phylogenie
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