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Methanosuratincola petrocarbonis gen. nov., sp. nov., a methyl-reducing methanogen isolated from Shengli oil field, and proposal of Methanosuratincolaceae fam. nov., Methanosuratincolales ord. nov. and Methanosuratincolia classis nov. in the phylum Thermoproteota

Citation
Wu et al. (2025). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 75 (7)
Names
Ca. Methanomethylicia Methanosuratincola petrocarbonis T Methanosuratincola Methanosuratincolia Methanosuratincolales Methanosuratincolaceae
Abstract
An anaerobic, thermophilic methanogen, designated strain LWZ-6T, was isolated from the Shengli oil field, China. The cells of strain LWZ-6T were non-motile cocci, with a diameter of 0.5–1.0 µm, and formed aggregates. They reduced methanol and monomethylamine into methane, using H2 as an electron donor. Dimethylamine, trimethylamine and methanethiol, H2/CO2, formate, acetate, pyruvate, lactate and glucose were not used as energy sources. Strain LWZ-6T required yeast extract, acetate or CO2 as car
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Two novel Patescibacteria: Phycocordibacter aenigmaticus gen. nov. sp. nov. and Minusculum obligatum gen. nov. sp. nov., both associated with microalgae optimized for carbon dioxide sequestration from flue gas

Citation
Jonas et al. (2025). mBio 16 (7)
Names
Phycocordibacterales Phycocordibacter aenigmaticus Ts Minusculum obligatum Ts Phycocordibacter Minusculum Phycocordibacteraceae
Abstract
ABSTRACT The functional roles of bacterial symbionts associated with microalgae remain understudied despite the importance of microalgae in biotechnology and environmental microbiology. 16S rRNA gene sequencing was conducted to analyze bacterial communities associated with two microalgae optimized for growth with flue gas containing 5%–10% CO 2 . Two dominant bacteria with no taxonomic classification beyond the class
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In silico approaches for consensus primer design and validation towards development of rapid diagnostics against the Candidatus Liberibacter species

Citation
S, A (2025). Crop Research VOLUME 60 (ISSUE 3 AND 4 (MAY AND JUL) 2025)
Names
Liberibacter
Abstract
Citrus greening or Huanglongbing (HLB) is a rapidly spreading disease caused by Candidatus Liberibacter species, which inhabit the phloem of citrus plants. It is primarily transmitted by psyllid insects. Managing HLB is challenging due to the bacterium's phloem-restricted nature, making diagnosis and treatment with antimicrobials difficult. Here in the present study, the bacterial consensus sequences were used for the primer design with In silico approaches and validated by PCR. The study was ca
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Description of Vacuolonema iberomarrocanum gen. et sp. nov. (Oculatellales, Cyanobacteria): a new marine cyanobacterial taxon from the Portuguese and Moroccan Atlantic coast

Citation
Morais et al. (2025). Phytotaxa 708 (2)
Names
Vacuolonema iberomarrocanum
Abstract
Cyanobacteria biodiversity remains underexplored despite their ecological importance and potential applications. To address this, we investigated two Leptolyngbya-like strains, LEGE 07170 and LEGE 191244, collected from marine tide pools in Portugal and Morocco using polyphasic approach. Phylogenetic analyses indicates that the strains form a distinct clade with strong statistical support in the Oculatellales order. The 16S rRNA gene identity matrix shows that the maximum shared values with the
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Dominant cixiid vector and transmission of ‘Candidatus Arsenophonus phytopathogenicus’ and ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani’-related strain 16SrXII-P in sugar beet in Austria

Citation
Kreitzer et al. (2025). Scientific Reports 15 (1)
Names
Ca. Arsenophonus phytopathogenicus Ca. Phytoplasma solani
Abstract
Abstract The presence of fastidious phytopathogenic bacteria ‘Candidatus Arsenophonus phytopathogenicus’ and ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma solani’ challenges sugar beet cultivation in Austria. Reptalus artemisiae (Becker, 1865) (referred before as Reptalus quinquecostatus sensu Holzinger et al. 2003) is the principal vector of ‘Ca. P. solani’ to sugar beet in Serbia, while Pentastiridius leporinus is the primary vector of ‘Ca. A. phytopathogenicus’ in western Europe and can also transmit ‘Ca
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<scp>ATPSyn</scp>‐β in <scp>Diaphorina citri</scp> facilitates the transmission of <scp>Candidatus</scp> Liberibacter asiaticus by interacting with its outer membrane protein A

Citation
Yuan et al. (2025). Pest Management Science 81 (7)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
AbstractBACKGROUNDAlthough it is known that Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (CLas), the agent of citrus Huanglongbing, circulates and multiplies within the insect vector Diaphorina citri, the specific factors enabling CLas transmission remain unclear. Previous studies have shown that ATPSyn‐β facilitates phytoplasma movement in vector insects, and functions as a transport protein in D. citri. In this study, the role of ATPSyn‐β was expected to be unveiled in CLas transmission in D. citri.RESUL
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