Microbiology


Publications
891

Phylogenomic analysis of Candidatus ‘Izimaplasma’ species: free-living representatives from a Tenericutes clade found in methane seeps

Citation
Skennerton et al. (2016). The ISME Journal 10 (11)
Names
Izemoplasma
Abstract
Abstract Tenericutes are a unique class of bacteria that lack a cell wall and are typically parasites or commensals of eukaryotic hosts. Environmental 16S rDNA surveys have identified a number of tenericute clades in diverse environments, introducing the possibility that these Tenericutes may represent non-host-associated, free-living microorganisms. Metagenomic sequencing of deep-sea methane seep sediments resulted in the assembly of two genomes from a Tenericutes-affiliated clad
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Genome reduction in an abundant and ubiquitous soil bacterium ‘Candidatus Udaeobacter copiosus’

Citation
Brewer et al. (2016). Nature Microbiology 2 (2)
Names
Ca. Udaeobacter copiosus
Abstract
AbstractAlthough bacteria within the Verrucomicrobia phylum are pervasive in soils around the world, they are under-represented in both isolate collections and genomic databases. Here, we describe a single verrucomicrobial group within the class Spartobacteria that is not closely related to any previously described taxa. We examined more than 1,000 soils and found this spartobacterial phylotype to be ubiquitous and consistently one of the most abundant soil bacterial phylotypes, particularly in
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Nitrogen fixation in a chemoautotrophic lucinid symbiosis

Citation
König et al. (2016). Nature Microbiology 2 (1)
Names
“Thiodiazotropha endolucinida” Ca. Thiodiazotropha fergusoni
Abstract
AbstractThe shallow water bivalve Codakia orbicularis lives in symbiotic association with a sulfur-oxidizing bacterium in its gills. The endosymbiont fixes CO2 and thus generates organic carbon compounds, which support the host's growth. To investigate the uncultured symbiont's metabolism and symbiont–host interactions in detail we conducted a proteogenomic analysis of purified bacteria. Unexpectedly, our results reveal a hitherto completely unrecognized feature of the C. orbicularis symbiont's
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Methylotrophic methanogenesis discovered in the archaeal phylum Verstraetearchaeota

Citation
Vanwonterghem et al. (2016). Nature Microbiology 1 (12)
Names
Ca. Methanomethylicia Ca. Methanomethylicus Ca. Methanomethylicus mesodigestus Ca. Methanomethylicus oleisabuli “Methanosuratincola petrocarbonis HOMONYM_1” “Methanosuratincola HOMONYM_1” Ca. Methanomethylicaceae Ca. Methanomethylicales “Methanomethylicota”
Abstract
AbstractMethanogenesis is the primary biogenic source of methane in the atmosphere and a key contributor to climate change. The long-standing dogma that methanogenesis originated within the Euryarchaeota was recently challenged by the discovery of putative methane-metabolizing genes in members of the Bathyarchaeota, suggesting that methanogenesis may be more phylogenetically widespread than currently appreciated. Here, we present the discovery of divergent methyl-coenzyme M reductase genes in po
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Genomic insights into members of the candidate phylum Hyd24-12 common in mesophilic anaerobic digesters

Citation
Kirkegaard et al. (2016). The ISME Journal 10 (10)
Names
“Fermentibacteria” “Fermentibacterales” Ca. Fermentibacteraceae Ca. Fermentibacter Ca. Fermentibacter danicus “Fermentibacterota”
Abstract
Abstract Members of the candidate phylum Hyd24-12 are globally distributed, but no genomic information or knowledge about their morphology, physiology or ecology is available. In this study, members of the Hyd24-12 lineage were shown to be present and abundant in full-scale mesophilic anaerobic digesters at Danish wastewater treatment facilities. In some samples, a member of the Hyd24-12 lineage was one of the most abundant genus-level bacterial taxa, accounting for up to 8% of th
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Chasing the elusive Euryarchaeota class WSA2: genomes reveal a uniquely fastidious methyl-reducing methanogen

Citation
Nobu et al. (2016). The ISME Journal 10 (10)
Names
“Methanofastidiosia” Ca. Methanofastidiosum Ca. Methanofastidiosum methylothiophilum
Abstract
AbstractThe ecophysiology of one candidate methanogen class WSA2 (or Arc I) remains largely uncharacterized, despite the long history of research on Euryarchaeota methanogenesis. To expand our understanding of methanogen diversity and evolution, we metagenomically recover eight draft genomes for four WSA2 populations. Taxonomic analyses indicate that WSA2 is a distinct class from other Euryarchaeota. None of genomes harbor pathways for CO2-reducing and aceticlastic methanogenesis, but all posses
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