Publications
4369

Sort by date names
Browse by authors subjects journals

The bacterial sulfur cycle in expanding dysoxic and euxinic marine waters

Citation
van Vliet et al. (2021). Environmental Microbiology 23 (6)
Names
Pseudothioglobus Pseudothioglobus singularis Ts
Abstract
Dysoxic marine waters (DMW, < 1 μM oxygen) are currently expanding in volume in the oceans, which has biogeochemical, ecological and societal consequences on a global scale. In these environments, distinct bacteria drive an active sulfur cycle, which has only recently been recognized for open‐ocean DMW. This review summarizes the current knowledge on these sulfur‐cycling bacteria. Critical bottlenecks and questions for future research are specifically addressed. Sulfate‐r
Text

Stably inherited transfer of the bacterial symbiont Candidatus Erwinia dacicola from wild olive fruit flies Bactrocera oleae to a laboratory strain

Citation
Livadaras et al. (2021). Bulletin of Entomological Research 111 (3)
Names
Ca. Erwinia dacicola
Abstract
AbstractThe olive fruit fly, Bactrocera oleae, the most serious pest of olives, requires the endosymbiotic bacteria Candidatus Erwinia dacicola in order to complete its development in unripe green olives. Hence a better understanding of the symbiosis of Ca. E. dacicola and its insect host may lead to new strategies for reduction of B. oleae and thus minimize its economic impact on olive production. Studies of this symbiosis are hampered as the bacterium cannot be grown in vitro and the establish
Text

Spatiotemporal Dynamics of ‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ Colonization Inside Citrus Plant and Huanglongbing Disease Development

Citation
Pandey et al. (2021). Phytopathology® 111 (6)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
‘Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ (CLas), the causal agent of citrus huanglongbing (HLB), colonizes inside the phloem and is naturally transmitted by the Asian citrus psyllid (ACP). Here, we investigated spatiotemporal CLas colonization in different tissues after ACP transmission. Of the nine plants successfully infected via ACP transmission, CLas was detected in the roots of all trees at 75 days postremoval of ACPs (DPR) but in the mature leaf of only one tree; this finding is consistent wit
Text

Expanded diversity of Asgard archaea and their relationships with eukaryotes

Citation
Liu et al. (2021). Nature 593 (7860)
Names
36 Names
Abstract

Amazonocrinis nigriterrae gen. nov., sp. nov., Atlanticothrix silvestris gen. nov., sp. nov. and Dendronalium phyllosphericum gen. nov., sp. nov., nostocacean cyanobacteria from Brazilian environments

Citation
Alvarenga et al. (2021). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 71 (5)
Names
Amazonocrinis
Abstract
The cyanobacterial genus Nostoc is an important contributor to carbon and nitrogen bioavailability in terrestrial ecosystems and a frequent partner in symbiotic relationships with non-diazotrophic organisms. However, since this currently is a polyphyletic genus, the diversity of Nostoc -like cyanobacteria is considerably un
Text

Candidatus Phytoplasma pini (pine witches'-broom phytoplasma)

Citation
Davis, Zhao (2021).
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma pini
Abstract
Abstract 'Ca. Phytoplasma pini' is a member of phytoplasma 16S rRNA gene RFLP group XXI, subgroup XXI-A. It has been identified in a number of European countries, including Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Spain, Czech Republic and Croatia. Outside of Europe it has been identified in China and Mozambique. A related strain has also been identified in Maryland, USA. In the USA, favourable climatic conditions and wide availability of potential host plants of the phytoplasma, suggest that the pot
Text

Candidatus Phytoplasma solani (Stolbur phytoplasma)

Citation
Quaglino (2021).
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma solani
Abstract
Abstract Phytoplasmas are cell-wall-less plant pathogenic bacteria of the class Mollicutes, which inhabit the phloem sieve tubes of plants and have been associated with several hundred diseases affecting economically important crops. Over the past few decades 'Candidatus Phytoplasma solani', belonging to the 16SrXII-A ribosomal subgroup, has been found to cause a range of plant diseases in different agro-ecosystems in many countries in Europe and the eastern Mediterranean area and a numb
Text

Enlightening the taxonomy darkness of human gut microbiomes with a cultured biobank

Citation
Liu et al. (2021). Microbiome 9 (1)
Names
“Lachnospira hominis HOMONYM_1”
Abstract
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 micr
Text

'Candidatus Phytoplasma dypsidis', a novel taxon associated with a lethal wilt disease of palms in Australia

Citation
Jones et al. (2021). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 71 (5)
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma Ca. Phytoplasma dypsidis Ca. Phytoplasma noviguineense
Abstract
A phytoplasma was initially detected in Dypsis poivriana by nested and real-time PCR from the botanical gardens in Cairns, Queensland, Australia in 2017. Further surveys in the Cairns region identified phytoplasma infections in eight additional dying ornamental palm species (Euterpe precatoria, Cocos nucifera, Verschaffeltia splendida, Brassiophoenix drymophloeodes, Burretiokentia hapala, Cyrtostachys renda, Reinhardtia gracilis, Carpoxylon macrospermum), a Phoenix species, a Euterpe species and
Text

Aquiluna borgnonia gen. nov., sp. nov., a member of a Microbacteriaceae lineage of freshwater bacteria with small genome sizes

Citation
Pitt et al. (2021). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 71 (5)
Names
Aquiluna Aquiluna borgnonia T “Aquiluna rubra”
Abstract
The actinobacterial strain 15G-AUS-rotT was isolated from an artificial pond located near Salzburg, Austria. The strain showed 16S rRNA gene sequence similarities of 98.7 % to Candidatus Aquiluna rubra and of 96.6 and 96.7 % to the two validly described species of the genus Rhodoluna . Phylogenetic reconstructions based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and genome-based on amino acid sequences of 118 single copy gene
Text