Pallen, Mark J.


Publications
6

Naming the unnamed: over 65,000 Candidatus names for unnamed Archaea and Bacteria in the Genome Taxonomy Database

Citation
Pallen et al. (2022). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 72 (9)
Names
“Afabia udivosa” “Afabia” “Afabiaceae” “Afabiales” “Afabiia” “Afabiota” “Paenistieleria bergensis”
Abstract
Thousands of new bacterial and archaeal species and higher-level taxa are discovered each year through the analysis of genomes and metagenomes. The Genome Taxonomy Database (GTDB) provides hierarchical sequence-based descriptions and classifications for new and as-yet-unnamed taxa. However, bacterial nomenclature, as currently configured, cannot keep up with the need for new well-formed names. Instead, microbiologists have been forced to use hard-to-remember alphanumeric placeholder labels. Here

Author Correction: Assembly of hundreds of novel bacterial genomes from the chicken caecum

Citation
Glendinning et al. (2021). Genome Biology 22 (1)
Names
“Adamsella”
Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via the original article.

The status Candidatus for uncultured taxa of Bacteria and Archaea: SWOT analysis

Citation
Pallen (2021). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 71 (9)
Names
Abstract
The status Candidatus was introduced to bacterial taxonomy in the 1990s to accommodate uncultured taxa defined by analyses of DNA sequences. Here I review the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (SWOT) associated with the status Candidatus in the light of a quarter century of use, twinned with recent developments in bacterial taxonomy and sequence-based taxonomic discovery. Despite ambiguities as to its scope, philosophical objections to its use and practical problems in implementat

Extensive microbial diversity within the chicken gut microbiome revealed by metagenomics and culture

Citation
Gilroy et al. (2021). PeerJ 9
Names
“Alectryocaccomicrobium” “Alectryocaccobium” “Galloscillospiraceae” “Limivivens” “Allolimicola stercorigallinarum” “Allolimicola” “Alectryobacillus merdavium” “Alectryobacillus” “Gemmiger faecavium” “Barnesiella excrementigallinarum” “Blautia stercoravium” “Desulfovibrio intestinigallinarum” “Limosilactobacillus merdigallinarum” “Acinetobacter avistercoris” “Anaerobiospirillum pullistercoris” “Gemmiger excrementipullorum” “Evtepia faecigallinarum” “Anaerofilum excrementigallinarum” “Acutalibacter pullistercoris” “Barnesiella excrementavium” “Evtepia faecavium” “Agathobaculum merdavium” “Eisenbergiella pullistercoris” “Tetragenococcus pullicola” “Alistipes intestinigallinarum” “Luteimonas excrementigallinarum” “Intestinimonas merdavium” “Sphingobacterium stercorigallinarum” “Rubneribacter avistercoris” “Rothia avicola” “Companilactobacillus pullicola” “Tidjanibacter faecipullorum” “Ruania gallistercoris” “Fournierella merdipullorum” “Gemmiger excrementavium” “Atopostipes pullistercoris” “Lactobacillus pullistercoris” “Janibacter merdipullorum” “Mucispirillum faecigallinarum” “Ligilactobacillus excrementavium” “Collinsella stercoripullorum” “Microbacterium stercoravium” “Mediterraneibacter merdipullorum” “Mediterraneibacter pullicola” “Fournierella merdigallinarum” “Mediterraneibacter merdigallinarum” “Limosilactobacillus excrementigallinarum” “Agathobaculum intestinipullorum” “Brevibacterium intestinavium” “Brachybacterium merdavium” “Desulfovibrio intestinavium” “Bariatricus faecipullorum” “Alistipes avicola” “Phocaeicola faecigallinarum” “Blautia merdipullorum” “Desulfovibrio gallistercoris” “Fournierella merdavium” “Fournierella excrementigallinarum” “Mailhella merdavium” “Nosocomiicoccus stercorigallinarum” “Eisenbergiella merdigallinarum” “Ligilactobacillus avistercoris” “Eisenbergiella merdavium” “Alistipes stercoravium” “Dietzia intestinipullorum” “Mediterraneibacter faecipullorum” “Mediterraneibacter faecigallinarum” “Dietzia intestinigallinarum” “Anaerostipes avistercoris” “Blautia merdavium” “Phocaeicola excrementigallinarum” “Corynebacterium faecigallinarum” “Mediterraneibacter excrementavium” “Acutalibacter stercorigallinarum” “Blautia stercorigallinarum” “Butyricicoccus avistercoris” “Eisenbergiella stercoravium” “Mediterraneibacter vanvlietii” “Acetatifactor stercoripullorum” “Borkfalkia faecipullorum” “Hungatella pullicola” “Blautia pullistercoris” “Anaerostipes excrementavium” “Fusicatenibacter merdavium” “Anaerotignum merdipullorum” “Mediterraneibacter stercoripullorum” “Borkfalkia excrementigallinarum” “Faecalibacterium gallistercoris” “Mediterraneibacter pullistercoris” “Limosilactobacillus intestinipullorum” “Intestinimonas stercoravium” “Merdibacter merdigallinarum” “Gemmiger stercoripullorum” “Borkfalkia stercoripullorum” “Enterocloster excrementipullorum” “Merdibacter merdavium” “Eisenbergiella intestinipullorum” “Gemmiger stercoravium” “Ruthenibacterium merdavium” “Mediterraneibacter excrementigallinarum”
Abstract
Background The chicken is the most abundant food animal in the world. However, despite its importance, the chicken gut microbiome remains largely undefined. Here, we exploit culture-independent and culture-dependent approaches to reveal extensive taxonomic diversity within this complex microbial community. Results We performed metagenomic sequencing of fifty chicken faecal samples from two breeds and analysed these, alongside all (n = 582) relevant publicly available chicken metagenomes, to c

Assembly of hundreds of novel bacterial genomes from the chicken caecum

Citation
Glendinning et al. (2020). Genome Biology 21 (1)
Names
“Allochristensenella” “Allobutyricicoccus” “Alangreenwoodia”
Abstract
Abstract Background Chickens are a highly important source of protein for a large proportion of the human population. The caecal microbiota plays a crucial role in chicken nutrition through the production of short-chain fatty acids, nitrogen recycling, and amino acid production. In this study, we sequence DNA from caecal content samples taken from 24 chickens belonging to either a fast or a slower growing breed consuming either a vegetable-only diet or a diet cont