| Literature DB >> 21304709 |
Stefan Spring, Reinhard Rachel, Alla Lapidus, Karen Davenport, Hope Tice, Alex Copeland, Jan-Fang Cheng, Susan Lucas, Feng Chen, Matt Nolan, David Bruce, Lynne Goodwin, Sam Pitluck, Natalia Ivanova, Konstantinos Mavromatis, Galina Ovchinnikova, Amrita Pati, Amy Chen, Krishna Palaniappan, Miriam Land, Loren Hauser, Yun-Juan Chang, Cynthia C Jeffries, Thomas Brettin, John C Detter, Roxanne Tapia, Cliff Han, Thomas Heimerl, Fabian Weikl, Evelyne Brambilla, Markus Göker, James Bristow, Jonathan A Eisen, Victor Markowitz, Philip Hugenholtz, Nikos C Kyrpides, Hans-Peter Klenk.
Abstract
Thermosphaera aggregans Huber et al. 1998 is the type species of the genus Thermosphaera, which comprises at the time of writing only one species. This species represents archaea with a hyperthermophilic, heterotrophic, strictly anaerobic and fermentative phenotype. The type strain M11TL(T) was isolated from a water-sediment sample of a hot terrestrial spring (Obsidian Pool, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming). Here we describe the features of this organism, together with the complete genome sequence and annotation. The 1,316,595 bp long single replicon genome with its 1,410 protein-coding and 47 RNA genes is a part of the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea project.Entities:
Keywords: Crenarchaeota; Desulfurococcaceae; GEBA; hot solfataric spring; hyperthermophile; obligate anaerobic; strictly fermentative metabolism; sulfur reduction
Year: 2010 PMID: 21304709 PMCID: PMC3035292 DOI: 10.4056/sigs.821804
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Stand Genomic Sci ISSN: 1944-3277
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree highlighting the position of T. aggregans relative to the other type strains of the other genera within the family Desulfurococcaceae. The tree was inferred from 1,307 aligned characters [8,9] of the 16S rRNA gene sequence under the maximum likelihood criterion [10] and rooted in accordance with the current taxonomy. The branches are scaled in terms of the expected number of substitutions per site. Numbers above branches are support values from 200 bootstrap replicates [11] if larger than 60%. Lineages with type strain genome sequencing projects registered in GOLD [12] are shown in blue, published genomes in bold.
Figure 2Transmission electron micrographs of cells of T. aggregans strain M11TLT. A: cells were shadowed with platinum; B: cells were freeze-etched. Scale bars, 1 µm
Classification and general features of T. aggregans strain M11TLT according to the MIGS recommendations [13]
| | | | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current classification | Domain | TAS [ | |
| Phylum | TAS [ | ||
| Class | TAS [ | ||
| Order | TAS [ | ||
| Family | TAS [ | ||
| Genus | TAS [ | ||
| Species | TAS [ | ||
| Type strain M11TL | TAS [ | ||
| Gram stain | not reported | ||
| Cell shape | coccoid, grapelike aggregates | TAS [ | |
| Motility | not reported (flagella present) | TAS [ | |
| Sporulation | non-sporulating | TAS [ | |
| Temperature range | 67-90°C | TAS [ | |
| Optimum temperature | 85°C | TAS [ | |
| Salinity | not determined | ||
| MIGS-22 | Oxygen requirement | aerobic | TAS [ |
| Carbon source | yeast extract, peptone, gelatin, amino acids, | TAS [ | |
| Energy source | see above | TAS [ | |
| MIGS-6 | Habitat | hot, pH neutral, solfataric springs | TAS [ |
| MIGS-15 | Biotic relationship | unknown | |
| MIGS-14 | Pathogenicity | none | TAS [ |
| Biosafety level | 1 | TAS [ | |
| Isolation | water/sediment sample | TAS [ | |
| MIGS-4 | Geographic location | Obsidian Pool, Yellowstone National Park, | TAS [ |
| MIGS-5 | Sample collection time | 1994 or before | NAS |
| MIGS-4.1 | Latitude | 44.806 | NAS |
| MIGS-4.3 | Depth | not reported | |
| MIGS-4.4 | Altitude | not reported |
Evidence codes - IDA: Inferred from Direct Assay (first time in publication); TAS: Traceable Author Statement (i.e., a direct report exists in the literature); NAS: Non-traceable Author Statement (i.e., not directly observed for the living, isolated sample, but based on a generally accepted property for the species, or anecdotal evidence). These evidence codes are from the Gene Ontology project [19]. If the evidence code is IDA, then the property was directly observed for a live isolate by one of the authors or an expert mentioned in the acknowledgments.
Genome sequencing project information
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| MIGS-31 | Finishing quality | Finished |
| MIGS-28 | Libraries used | Two 454 pyrosequence libraries, standard and pairs end (8 kb insert size) |
| MIGS-29 | Sequencing platforms | 454 Titanium, Illumina GAii |
| MIGS-31.2 | Sequencing coverage | 104.8× 454 pyrosequence, 277× Illumina |
| MIGS-30 | Assemblers | Newbler, Velvet, phrap |
| MIGS-32 | Gene calling method | Prodigal, GenePRIMP |
| GenBank ID | CP001939 | |
| GenBank Date of Release | May 17, 2010 | |
| GOLD ID | Gi02946 | |
| NCBI project ID | 36571 | |
| Database: IMG-GEBA | 2501939626 | |
| MIGS-13 | Source material identifier | DSM 11486 |
| Project relevance | GEBA |
Genome Statistics
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| Genome size (bp) | 1,316,595 | 100.00% |
| DNA coding region (bp) | 1,221,613 | 92.79% |
| DNA G+C content (bp) | 615,302 | 46.73% |
| Number of replicons | 1 | |
| Extrachromosomal elements | 0 | |
| Total genes | 1,457 | 100.00% |
| RNA genes | 47 | 3.23% |
| rRNA operons | 1 | |
| Protein-coding genes | 1,419 | 96.77% |
| Pseudo genes | 23 | 1.58% |
| Genes with function prediction | 914 | 62.73% |
| Genes in paralog clusters | 79 | 5.42% |
| Genes assigned to COGs | 990 | 67.95% |
| Genes assigned Pfam domains | 1,007 | 69.11% |
| Genes with signal peptides | 131 | 8.99% |
| Genes with transmembrane helices | 323 | 22.17% |
| CRISPR repeats | 1 |
Figure 3Graphical circular map of the genome. From outside to the center: Genes on forward strand (color by COG categories), Genes on reverse strand (color by COG categories), RNA genes (tRNAs green, rRNAs red, other RNAs black), GC content, GC skew.
Number of genes associated with the general COG functional categories
| | | | |
|---|---|---|---|
| J | 152 | 10.8 | Translation, ribosomal structure and biogenesis |
| A | 2 | 0.1 | RNA processing and modification |
| K | 50 | 3.5 | Transcription |
| L | 58 | 4.1 | Replication, recombination and repair |
| B | 2 | 0.1 | Chromatin structure and dynamics |
| D | 0 | 0.0 | Cell cycle control, cell division, chromosome partitioning |
| Y | 0 | 0.0 | Nuclear structure |
| V | 12 | 0.9 | Defense mechanisms |
| T | 17 | 1.2 | Signal transduction mechanisms |
| M | 35 | 2.5 | Cell wall/membrane biogenesis |
| N | 9 | 0.6 | Cell motility |
| Z | 0 | 0.0 | Cytoskeleton |
| W | 0 | 0.0 | Extracellular structures |
| U | 13 | 0.9 | Intracellular trafficking, secretion, and vesicular transport |
| O | 44 | 3.1 | Posttranslational modification, protein turnover, chaperones |
| C | 96 | 6.8 | Energy production and conversion |
| G | 55 | 3.9 | Carbohydrate transport and metabolism |
| E | 71 | 5.0 | Amino acid transport and metabolism |
| F | 32 | 2.3 | Nucleotide transport and metabolism |
| H | 49 | 3.5 | Coenzyme transport and metabolism |
| I | 14 | 1.0 | Lipid transport and metabolism |
| P | 70 | 5.0 | Inorganic ion transport and metabolism |
| Q | 4 | 0.3 | Secondary metabolites biosynthesis, transport and catabolism |
| R | 176 | 12.5 | General function prediction only |
| S | 467 | 33.1 | Function unknown |
| - | 467 | 33.1 | Not in COGs |
Figure 4Organization of genes encoding putative membrane-bound multiprotein complexes in T. aggregans and related members of Desulfurococcaceae. Operons of reference genes with asserted function are shown in the first line of each group. Genes with an assumed homologous function are labeled in the same color. Genes encoding subunits of putative multimeric cation-proton antiporters are shown in shades of green; genes with similarity to subunits of [NiFe] hydrogenases/NADH-quinone oxidoreductases are shown in red colors; genes representing the large and small subunit of supposed formate dehydrogenases are displayed in dark and light blue, respectively; genes labeled in yellow are homologous to genes encoding the alpha-subunit of Pyrococcus furiosus sulfide dehydrogenase (sudA); and genes representing hypothetical proteins of unknown function are shown in white. A) MBH-related energy-coupling hydrogenases. B) MBX-related ferredoxin-NADPH oxidoreductases. C) MBX-related ferredoxin-NADPH oxidoreductases. The reference operon of Thermococcus litoralis has been retrieved by cloning a fragment of genomic DNA, so that the arrangement of genes following mnhF could not be determined.