Publications
3846

Sort by date names
Browse by authors subjects journals

Draft Genome Sequences of “ Candidatus Synechococcus spongiarum,” Cyanobacterial Symbionts of the Mediterranean Sponge Aplysina aerophoba

Citation
Slaby, Hentschel (2017). Genome Announcements 5 (17)
Names
Ca. Synechococcus spongiarum
Abstract
ABSTRACT We report here four draft genome sequences belonging to clade F of the cyanobacterium “ Candidatus Synechococcus spongiarum” of the marine sponge Aplysina aerophoba , which were collected from two nearby locations in the northern Adriatic Sea. The sequences provide the basis for within-clade comparisons between members of this widespread group of cyanobacterial sponge symbionts.

Genome Sequence of “ Candidatus Carsonella ruddii” Strain BC, a Nutritional Endosymbiont of Bactericera cockerelli

Citation
Riley et al. (2017). Genome Announcements 5 (17)
Names
Ca. Carsonella ruddii
Abstract
ABSTRACT Here, we report the genome of “ Candidatus Carsonella ruddii” strain BC, a nutritional endosymbiont of the tomato psyllid Bactericera cockerelli . The 173,802-bp genome contains 198 protein-coding genes, with a G+C content of 14.8%.

Feline leprosy due to Candidatus ‘Mycobacterium tarwinense’: Further clinical and molecular characterisation of 15 previously reported cases and an additional 27 cases

Citation
O’Brien et al. (2017). Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery 19 (5)
Names
Abstract
Objectives: This paper, the first in a series of three on ‘feline leprosy’, provides a detailed description of disease referable to Candidatus ‘Mycobacterium tarwinense’, the most common cause of feline leprosy in Victoria, Australia. Methods: Cases were sourced retrospectively and prospectively for this observational study, describing clinical, geographical and molecular microbiological data for cats definitively diagnosed with Candidatus ‘M tarwinense’ infection. Results: A total of 145 cases

Draft genome sequence of a Candidatus Brocadia bacterium enriched from tropical-climate activated sludge

Citation
Liu et al. (2017).
Names
“Brocadia”
Abstract
AbstractWe present the draft genome of an anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing (anammox) bacterium, cluster III Candidatus Brocadia, which was enriched in an anammox reactor. A 3.2 Mb genome sequence comprising 168 contigs was assembled, in which 2,765 gene-coding regions, 47 tRNAs, and 5S, 16S and 23S ribosomal RNAs were annotated. No evidence for the presence of a nitric oxide-forming nitrite reductase was found.

Metatranscriptomics Supports the Mechanism for Biocathode Electroautotrophy by “ Candidatus Tenderia electrophaga”

Citation
Eddie et al. (2017). mSystems 2 (2)
Names
Tenderia electrophaga Ts
Abstract
Bacteria that directly use electrodes as metabolic electron donors (biocathodes) have been proposed for applications ranging from microbial electrosynthesis to advanced bioelectronics for cellular communication with machines. However, just as we understand very little about oxidation of analogous natural insoluble electron donors, such as iron oxide, the organisms and extracellular electron transfer (EET) pathways underlying the electrode-cell direct electron transfer processes are

Draft Whole-Genome Sequence of “ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” Strain TX2351 Isolated from Asian Citrus Psyllids in Texas, USA

Citation
Kunta et al. (2017). Genome Announcements 5 (15)
Names
Ca. Liberibacter asiaticus
Abstract
ABSTRACT We report here the draft genome sequence of “ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus” strain TX2351, collected from Asian citrus psyllids in south Texas, USA. The TX2351 genome has a size of 1,252,043 bp, a G+C content of 36.5%, 1,184 predicted open reading frames, and 52 RNA genes.

Genomic comparisons of a bacterial lineage that inhabits both marine and terrestrial deep subsurface systems

Citation
Jungbluth et al. (2017). PeerJ 5
Names
“Desulfopertinax” “Desulfopertinax cowenii” Desulforudis audaxviator Ts
Abstract
It is generally accepted that diverse, poorly characterized microorganisms reside deep within Earth’s crust. One such lineage of deep subsurface-dwelling bacteria is an uncultivated member of the Firmicutes phylum that can dominate molecular surveys from both marine and continental rock fracture fluids, sometimes forming the sole member of a single-species microbiome. Here, we reconstructed a genome from basalt-hosted fluids of the deep subseafloor along the eastern Juan de Fuca Ridge flank and