Literature DB >> 22180816

Complete genome sequence of the thermophilic, hydrogen-oxidizing Bacillus tusciae type strain (T2) and reclassification in the new genus, Kyrpidia gen. nov. as Kyrpidia tusciae comb. nov. and emendation of the family Alicyclobacillaceae da Costa and Rainey, 2010.

Hans-Peter Klenk, Alla Lapidus, Olga Chertkov, Alex Copeland, Tijana Glavina Del Rio, Matt Nolan, Susan Lucas, Feng Chen, Hope Tice, Jan-Fang Cheng, Cliff Han, David Bruce, Lynne Goodwin, Sam Pitluck, Amrita Pati, Natalia Ivanova, Konstantinos Mavromatis, Chris Daum, Amy Chen, Krishna Palaniappan, Yun-Juan Chang, Miriam Land, Loren Hauser, Cynthia D Jeffries, John C Detter, Manfred Rohde, Birte Abt, Rüdiger Pukall, Markus Göker, James Bristow, Victor Markowitz, Philip Hugenholtz, Jonathan A Eisen.   

Abstract

Bacillus tusciae Bonjour & Aragno 1994 is a hydrogen-oxidizing, thermoacidophilic spore former that lives as a facultative chemolithoautotroph in solfataras. Although 16S rRNA gene sequencing was well established at the time of the initial description of the organism, 16S sequence data were not available and the strain was placed into the genus Bacillus based on limited chemotaxonomic information. Despite the now obvious misplacement of strain T2 as a member of the genus Bacillus in 16S rRNA-based phylogenetic trees, the misclassification remained uncorrected for many years, which was likely due to the extremely difficult, analysis-hampering cultivation conditions and poor growth rate of the strain. Here we provide a taxonomic re-evaluation of strain T2T (= DSM 2912 = NBRC 15312) and propose its reclassification as the type strain of a new species, Kyrpidia tusciae, and the type species of the new genus Kyrpidia, which is a sister-group of Alicyclobacillus. The family Alicyclobacillaceae da Costa and Rainey, 2010 is emended. The 3,384,766 bp genome with its 3,323 protein-coding and 78 RNA genes is part of the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea project.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bacillaceae; GEBA; aerobe; facultative chemolithoautotroph; free-living; hydrogen-oxidizing; solfatara; spore-forming; thermoacidophile

Year:  2011        PMID: 22180816      PMCID: PMC3236038          DOI: 10.4056/sigs.2144922

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci        ISSN: 1944-3277


Introduction

Strain T2T (= DSM 2912 = NBRC 15312) is the type strain of the Bacillus tusciae [1]. Both strain T2T and strain T201 were isolated from ponds in the solfatara of San Federigo, a geothermal area near Lago, Tuscany, Italy [1,Table 1], as indicated in the Latin species epithet tusciae, meaning from Tuscia [1]. In the original study of Bonjour and Aragno [1], DNA:DNA reassociation studies of strains T2T, Bacillus schlegelii (also autotrophic) and the thermoacidophilic Bacillus acidocaldarius (later on reclassified as Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius) from another hot spring were carried out. Because of the low levels of hybridization observed, the authors proposed that strains T2T and T201 formed a distinct taxonomic unit [1]. However, only limited chemotaxonomic data was available at the time and 16S rRNA sequence data was not available, which led the authors to place the species into the genus Bacillus [1]. Rather difficult cultivation conditions and the poor growth rate of strain T2T likely delayed an earlier re-classification although Rainey et al. previously noted the link to the genus Alicyclobacillus [19]. This was recently corroborated by the observation that strain T2T as well as A. acidocaldarius lack the sspE gene for acid-soluble spore proteins frequently found in members of the Bacillales [20]. Here we present a summary classification and a set of features for B. tusciae strain T2T, a description of the complete genome sequencing and annotation and a proposal to reclassify B. tusciae as a member of the new genus Kyrpidia as Kyrpidia tuscae comb. nov.
Table 1

Classification and general features of Kyrpidia tusciae strain T2T according to the MIGS recommendations [2] and the NamesforLife database [3].

MIGS ID    Property    Term   Evidence code
    Current classification    Domain Bacteria   TAS [4]
    Phylum Firmicutes   TAS [5-7]
    Class Bacilli   TAS [8,9]
    Order Bacillales   TAS [10,11]
    Family Bacillaceae   TAS [10,12]
    Genus Bacillus   TAS [10,13,14]
    Species Bacillus tusciae   TAS [1,15]
    Type strain T2   TAS [1]
    Revised classification    Family Alicyclobacillaceae   TAS [9,16]
    Genus Kyrpidia   NAS
    Species Kyrpidia tusciae   NAS
    Gram stain    positive   TAS [1]
    Cell shape    straight rods   TAS [1]
    Motility    not reported, but lateral flagella visible   TAS [1]
    Sporulation    sporulating   TAS [1]
    Temperature range    thermophile, grows > 47°, < 65°C   TAS [1]
    Optimum temperature    55°C   TAS [1]
    Salinity    not reported
MIGS-22    Oxygen requirement    aerobic   TAS [1]
    Carbon source    short chain fatty acids, amino acids and alcohols   TAS [1]
    Energy metabolism    facultatively chemolithoautotroph   TAS [1]
MIGS-6    Habitat    hot, acidic solfatara fields   TAS [1]
MIGS-15    Biotic relationship    free living   TAS [1]
MIGS-14    Pathogenicity    none   NAS
    Biosafety level    1   TAS [17]
    Isolation    ponds in solfatara   TAS [1]
MIGS-4    Geographic location    San Frederigo, near Lago, Tuscany (Italy)   TAS [1]
MIGS-5    Sample collection time    about or before 1984   TAS [1]
MIGS-4.1MIGS-4.2    Latitude    Longitude    43.33    10.50   NAS
MIGS-4.3    Depth    not reported
MIGS-4.4    Altitude    about 155 m   NAS

Evidence codes - 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 of the Gene Ontology project [18].

Evidence codes - 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 of the Gene Ontology project [18].

Classification and features

A representative genomic 16S rRNA sequence of B. tusciae T2T was compared using NCBI BLAST [21] under default settings (e.g., considering only the high-scoring segment pairs (HSPs) from the best 250 hits) with the most recent release of the Greengenes database [22] and the relative frequencies of taxa and keywords (reduced to their stems [23]) were determined, weighted by BLAST scores. The most frequently occurring genera were Alicyclobacillus (67.8%), Bacillus (18.2%), Thermoactinomyces (6.0%), Paenibacillus (5.6%) and Exiguobacterium (1.6%) (99 hits in total). Regarding the seven hits to sequences from members of the species, the average identity within HSPs was 99.6%, whereas the average coverage by HSPs was 99.5%. Among all other species, the one yielding the highest score was A. acidiphilus NR_028637, which corresponds to an identity of 92.4% and an HSP coverage of 57.7%. (Note that the Greengenes database uses the INSDC (= EMBL/NCBI/DDBJ) annotation, which is not an authoritative source for nomenclature or classification.) The highest-scoring environmental sequence was EU638396 ('Ecological Role Firmicutes Identified Thermophilic Microbial Fuel Cells thermophilic microbial fuel cell acetate-fed experiment clone SHBZ1905')), which showed an identity of 99.4% and an HSP coverage of 90.0%. The most frequently occurring keywords within the labels of all environmental samples that were hits were 'microbi' (13.3%), 'thermophil' (12.5%), 'cell, fuel' (12.4%), 'ecolog, firmicut, identifi, role' (6.2%) and 'experi' (6.1%) (151 hits in total). The most frequently occurring keywords within the labels of those environmental samples which yielded hits of a higher score than the highest scoring species were 'microbi' (13.9%), 'cell, fuel, thermophil' (13.1%), 'ecolog, firmicut, identifi, role' (6.5%), 'experi' (6.4%) and 'acetate-f' (4.7%) (124 hits in total). These keywords corroborate the features of the environment from which strain T2T was isolated. Figure 1 shows the phylogenetic neighborhood of B. tusciae in a 16S rRNA tree. The sequences of the five 16S rRNA gene copies in the genome differ from each other by up to eight nucleotides, and differ by up to six nucleotides from the previously published 16S rRNA sequence AB042062.
Figure 1

Phylogenetic tree highlighting the position of B. tusciae relative to the type strains within the families Alicyclobacillaceae and Thermoactinomycetaceae, which gave the best hits when conducting a BLAST search [22] against the sequences contained in the last release from the All-Species-Living-Tree Project [24], and the type strains of all other families within the order Bacillales. The tree was inferred from 1,403 aligned characters [25,26] of the 16S rRNA gene sequence under the maximum likelihood (ML) criterion [27]. Rooting was done initially using the midpoint method [28] and then checked for its agreement with the current classification (Table 1). The branches are scaled in terms of the expected number of substitutions per site. Numbers adjacent to the branches are support values from 450 ML bootstrap replicates [29] (left) and from 1,000 maximum parsimony (MP) bootstrap replicates [30] (right) if larger than 60%. Lineages with type strain genome sequencing projects registered in GOLD [31] are labeled with one asterisk, those also listed as 'Complete and Published' with two asterisks [32,33].

Phylogenetic tree highlighting the position of B. tusciae relative to the type strains within the families Alicyclobacillaceae and Thermoactinomycetaceae, which gave the best hits when conducting a BLAST search [22] against the sequences contained in the last release from the All-Species-Living-Tree Project [24], and the type strains of all other families within the order Bacillales. The tree was inferred from 1,403 aligned characters [25,26] of the 16S rRNA gene sequence under the maximum likelihood (ML) criterion [27]. Rooting was done initially using the midpoint method [28] and then checked for its agreement with the current classification (Table 1). The branches are scaled in terms of the expected number of substitutions per site. Numbers adjacent to the branches are support values from 450 ML bootstrap replicates [29] (left) and from 1,000 maximum parsimony (MP) bootstrap replicates [30] (right) if larger than 60%. Lineages with type strain genome sequencing projects registered in GOLD [31] are labeled with one asterisk, those also listed as 'Complete and Published' with two asterisks [32,33]. B. tusciae cells are straight rods measuring 0.8 x 4-5 μm length (Figure 2) with single laterally inserted flagella [1]. In young cultures, cells stain Gram-positive and exhibit oval, subterminal spores that swell the sporangium [1]. Cultures grow at 55°C at a pH ranging from 4.2 to 4.8 [1]. Although cells grow best under autotrophic conditions via hydrogen oxidation, they can also grow heterotrophic on alcohols, amino acids and short chain fatty acids, but not with sugars [1]. Substrate usage was described in detail by Bonjour and Aragno [1]. Cells contain a soluble malate-dehydrogenase activity, which cannot reduce pyridine (NAD+/NAD(P)+) [1], nor NADH oxidation was observed [1]. Hydrogenase activity was reported as being inducible [1]. An operational Calvin cycle was reported based on the presence of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase activity in autotrophically-grown cells [1]. Autotrophically grown cells show inclusions of poly-β-hydroxybutyric acid [1].
Figure 2

Scanning electron micrograph of B. tusciae strain T2T

Scanning electron micrograph of B. tusciae strain T2T

Chemotaxonomy

The structure of the cell wall of strain T2T was reported as typically Gram-positive, without a protein coat [1]. ω-alicyclic fatty acids are lacking and menaquinone MK-7 was identified as the main quinone (personal communication Brian J. Tindall).

Genome sequencing and annotation

Genome project history

This organism was selected for sequencing on the basis of its phylogenetic position [34], and is part of the enomic ncyclopedia of acteria and rchaea project [35]. The genome project is deposited in the Genomes OnLine Database [31] and the complete genome sequence in GenBank. Sequencing, finishing and annotation were performed by the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI). A summary of the project information is shown in Table 2.
Table 2

Genome sequencing project information

MIGS ID   Property   Term
MIGS-31   Finishing quality   Finished
MIGS-28   Libraries used   Two genomic libraries: Sanger 8 kb pMCL200 and 454 standard library
MIGS-29   Sequencing platforms   ABI3730, 454 GS FLX
MIGS-31.2   Sequencing coverage   5.5 × Sanger; 25.2 × pyrosequence
MIGS-30   Assemblers   Newbler version 2.0.0-PreRelease-07/15/2008, phrap
MIGS-32   Gene calling method   Prodigal 1.4, GenePRIMP
   Genbank ID   CP002017
   Genbank Date of Release   April 5, 2010
   GOLD ID   Gc01268
   NCBI project ID   31345
   Database: IMG-GEBA   646564511
MIGS-13   Source material identifier   DSM 2912
   Project relevance   Tree of Life, GEBA

Growth conditions and DNA isolation

B. tusciae strain T2T, DSM 2912, was grown in DSMZ medium 369 (Bacillus tusciae medium) [36] at 50°C. DNA was isolated from 1-1.5 g of cell paste using Qiagen Genomic 500 DNA Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) with lysis modification st/LALMP according to Wu et al. [35]. DNA is available through the DNA Bank Network [37].

Genome sequencing and assembly

The genome was sequenced using a combination of Sanger and 454 sequencing platforms. All general aspects of library construction and sequencing can be found at the JGI website [38]. Pyrosequencing reads were assembled using the Newbler assembler (Roche). Large Newbler contigs were broken into 3,650 overlapping fragments of 1,000 bp and entered into assembly as pseudo-reads. The sequences were assigned quality scores based on Newbler consensus q-scores with modifications to account for overlap redundancy and adjust inflated q-scores. A hybrid 454/Sanger assembly was made using the phrap assembler [39]. Possible mis-assemblies were corrected with Dupfinisher and gaps between contigs were closed by editing in Consed, by custom primer walks from sub-clones or PCR products [40]. A total of 549 Sanger finishing reads were needed to close gaps, to resolve repetitive regions, and to raise the quality of the finished sequence. The error rate of the completed genome sequence is less than 1 in 100,000. Together, the combination of the Sanger and 454 sequencing platforms provided 30.7 × coverage of the genome. The final assembly contains 18,870 Sanger reads and 413,112 pyrosequencing reads.

Genome annotation

Genes were identified using Prodigal [41] as part of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory genome annotation pipeline, followed by a round of manual curation using the JGI GenePRIMP pipeline [42]. The predicted CDSs were translated and used to search the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) non-redundant database, UniProt, TIGR-Fam, Pfam, PRIAM, KEGG, COG, and InterPro databases. Additional gene prediction analysis and functional annotation was performed within the Integrated Microbial Genomes - Expert Review platform [43].

Genome properties

The genome consists of a 3,384,766 bp long circular chromosome with a G+C content of 59.1% (Table 3 and Figure 3). Of the 3,401 genes predicted, 3,323 were protein-coding genes, and 78 RNAs; 173 pseudogenes were also identified. The majority of the protein-coding genes (70.7%) were assigned a putative function while the remaining ones were annotated as hypothetical proteins. The distribution of genes into COGs functional categories is presented in Table 4.
Table 3

Genome Statistics

Attribute   Value    % of Total
Genome size (bp)   3,384,766    100.00%
DNA coding region (bp)   2,896,588    85.58%
DNA G+C content (bp)   2,000,875    59.11%
Number of replicons   1
Extrachromosomal elements   0
Total genes   3,401    100.00%
RNA genes   78    2.29%
rRNA operons   5
Protein-coding genes   3,323    97.71%
Pseudo genes   173    5.09%
Genes with function prediction   2,404    70.69%
Genes in paralog clusters   718    21.11%
Genes assigned to COGs   2,456    74.21%
Genes assigned Pfam domains   2,657    78.12%
Genes with signal peptides   530    15.58%
Genes with transmembrane helices   728    21.41%
CRISPR repeats   4
Figure 3

Graphical circular map of the chromosome. 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.

Table 4

Number of genes associated with the general COG functional categories

Code  value  %age    Description
J  153  5.6    Translation, ribosomal structure and biogenesis
A  0  0.0    RNA processing and modification
K  198  7.2    Transcription
L  192  7.0    Replication, recombination and repair
B  1  0.0    Chromatin structure and dynamics
D  36  1.3    Cell cycle control, cell division, chromosome partitioning
Y  0  0.0    Nuclear structure
V  44  1.6    Defense mechanisms
T  121  4.4    Signal transduction mechanisms
M  116  4.2    Cell wall/membrane/envelope biogenesis
N  62  2.3    Cell motility
Z  1  0.0    Cytoskeleton
W  0  0.0    Extracellular structures
U  41  1.5    Intracellular trafficking, secretion and vesicular transport
O  95  3.5    Posttranslational modification, protein turnover, chaperones
C  217  7.9    Energy production and conversion
G  111  4.1    Carbohydrate transport and metabolism
E  255  9.3    Amino acid transport and metabolism
F  68  2.5    Nucleotide transport and metabolism
H  133  4.9    Coenzyme transport and metabolism
I  145  5.3    Lipid transport and metabolism
P  133  4.9    Inorganic ion transport and metabolism
Q  97  3.5    Secondary metabolites biosynthesis, transport and catabolism
R  298  10.9    General function prediction only
S  224  8.2    Function unknown
-  945  27.8    Not in COGs
Graphical circular map of the chromosome. 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.

Insights into the genome

At the time when the species name B. tusciae was validly published [9], a 16S rRNA gene sequence of the strain was not generated, but DNA-DNA hybridizations (DDHs) were performed with two reference strains, B. schlegelii [44] and B. acidocaldarius [45], to show that strain T2T represents a novel species within the genus Bacillus [1]. While B. schlegelii was named by the same senior author as B. tusciae and most probably is as misplaced in the genus Bacillus as B. tusciae (see below), B. acidocaldarius was subsequently reclassified as Alicyclobacillus acidocaldarius [46]. In retrospect, considering 16S rRNA gene sequence identities of 88.8% (for A. acidocaldarius) and 85.7% (for B. schlegelii) it is not surprising that Bonjour and Aragon observed only 17% and 0% DDH similarity, respectively, for their novel isolate [1]. While the members of the genus Alicyclobacillus do in fact represent the closest relatives of strain T2T (Figure 1) with 87.5% to 89.0% 16S rRNA sequence identity in EzTaxon [47], the appropriate taxonomic placement of B. schlegelii seems to be an unresolved question, with no greater than 89.3% rRNA sequence identity found with other type strains, none of which are members of the genus Bacillus [47]. Figure 1 shows B. tusciae as a sister group of one of the two clades that comprise Alicyclobacillus, with A. pohliae more closely related to Tumebacillus than to the other members of the genus and likely being misclassified based on the current data. However, while the clade comprising B. tusciae, Alicyclobacillus and Tumebacillus has significant statistical support (100% under ML and 97% under MP), the claim that the clade comprises only Tumebacillus and A. pohliae is unsupported. As two of the genera selected for Figure 1, Alicyclobacillus and Bacillus, appeared as polyphyletic in the tree, we conducted both unconstrained heuristic searches for the best tree under the ML [27] and MP criterion [30] as well as searches constrained for the monophyly of these two genera, respectively (for details of the data matrix see the figure caption). The best-known ML tree had a log likelihood of -13,289.73, whereas the best trees found under the constraint of Alicyclobacillus monophyly had a log likelihood of -13,297.23 and was not significantly worse in the Shimodaira-Hasegawa test as implemented in RAxML [27] (α = 0.05). However, when enforcing Bacillus monophyly, the resulting log likelihood was -13,412.24, significantly worse than the best tree (α = 0.01). The best-known MP trees had a score of 2,362, whereas the best trees found under the constraint of Alicyclobacillus monophyly had a score of 2,374 and were not significantly worse in the Kishino-Hasegawa test as implemented in PAUP* [30] (α = 0.05). When enforcing Bacillus (Bacillus subtilis and B. tusciae) monophyly, the resulting score was 2,439, significantly worse than the best tree (p < 0.0001). (See, e.g., chapter 21 in [48] for an in-depth description of such paired-site tests.). Accordingly, the current classification of B. tusciae in Bacillus is at odds with the 16S rRNA data and does not reflect the natural relationships based on that gene. In contrast, the placement of A. pohliae in Alicyclobacillus is not significantly disputed by the data. Table 5 shows the whole-genome distances between B. tusciae, A. acidocaldarius [32] and B. subtilis [33] as calculated using the genome-to-genome distance calculator [49-51]. The lower left triangle shows those distances derived by dividing the total sequence length not covered by HSPs through total genome length (left) and by dividing the total number of non-identical base pairs within HSPs by total HSP length (right); the upper right triangle shows the distance derived by dividing total genome length minus total number of identical base pairs within HSPs by total genome length. As expected, those distances relating HSP coverage and number of identical base pairs within HSPs to total genome length are higher between B. tusciae and B. subtilis than between B. tusciae and A. acidocaldarius. That the distances relating the number of identical base pairs to total HSP length behave differently indicates that the genomic similarities between B. tusciae and B. subtilis are more strongly restricted to more conserved sequences, a kind of saturation phenomenon [50]. Figure 4 shows an unrooted phylogenetic network inferred using the Neighbor-Net algorithm from whole-genome distances calculated with GGDC [49-51]. The grouping of B. tusciae and A. acidocaldarius, as well as the very tree-like appearance of this part of the network indicate that genomic data are also in conflict with the placement of B. tusciae within Bacillus.
Table 5

Genome-to-genome distances as calculated using GGDC [49-51].

   B. tusciae   B. subtilis subsp. subtilis   A. acidocaldarius
B. tusciae (CP002017 = NC_014098)   0.0000   0.9916   0.97030
B. subtilis subsp. subtilis (AL009126 = NC_000964)   0.9902/0.1452   0.0000   0.9908
A. acidocaldarius (CP001727-001730 = NC_013205, 07, 08)   0.9646/0.1629   0.9893/0.1366   0.0000
Figure 4

Unrooted phylogenetic network inferred with the Neighbor-Net algorithm as implemented in SplitsTree version 4.10 [52] from genome-to-genome distances calculated using GGDC [49-51]. The analysis includes all completely sequenced Bacillales type strain genomes as registered in GOLD at the time of publication [31]. Here, the logarithmic version of the distance calculated as the total genome length minus total number of identical base pairs within HSPs, divided by total genome length (see Table 5), was used as GGDC distance.

Unrooted phylogenetic network inferred with the Neighbor-Net algorithm as implemented in SplitsTree version 4.10 [52] from genome-to-genome distances calculated using GGDC [49-51]. The analysis includes all completely sequenced Bacillales type strain genomes as registered in GOLD at the time of publication [31]. Here, the logarithmic version of the distance calculated as the total genome length minus total number of identical base pairs within HSPs, divided by total genome length (see Table 5), was used as GGDC distance. The fraction of shared genes in the genomes of B. tusciae T2T, A. acidocaldarius [32] and B. subtilis [33] is shown in a Venn diagram (Figure 5). The numbers of pairwise shared genes were calculated with the phylogenetic profiler function of the IMG-ER platform [43]. The homologous genes within the genomes were detected with a maximum e-value of 10-5 and a minimum identity of 30%.
Figure 5

Venn diagram depicting the intersections of protein sets between the target genome and representative genomes of Bacillus and Alicyclobacillus.

Venn diagram depicting the intersections of protein sets between the target genome and representative genomes of Bacillus and Alicyclobacillus. A total of 1,363 of the genes are shared by all three genomes, with about equal numbers of genes (295-387) shared between pairs of genomes to the exclusion of the third genome. Within the 1,278 unique genes of B. tusciae that have no detectable homologues in the genomes of A. acidocaldarius and B. subtilis (under the sequence similarity thresholds used for the comparison) are the genes encoding the key enzymes for the Calvin cycle: ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Btus_2871 large subunit, Btus_2872 small subunit) and the phosphoribulokinase (Btus_2868). A closer look at the genome of B. tusciae revealed additional genes coding for enzymes of the Calvin cycle located in the immediate neighborhood of the ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase genes: phosphoglyceratekinase (Btus_2865), fructose-bisphosphate aldolase (Btus_2867), phosphoribulokinase (Btus_2868), glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (Btus_2869), fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (Btus_2870) ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase (Btus_2871 large subunit, Btus_2872 small subunit) which are probably organized as an operon. In autotrophically-grown cells of B. tusciae, an active ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase in an operating Calvin cycle was reported [1]. The phylogenetic position of strain T2T as shown in Figures 1 and 4, corroborated by its primarily autotrophic energy metabolism [1] (Tables 1 and 6), and the lack of sspE genes for acid-soluble spore proteins [20] (Table 6), indicated a clear need to reclassify B. tusciae. The joint but distinct phylogenetic position (Figure 1) supports the establishment of a novel genus rather than the inclusion of B. tusciae in Alicyclobacillus. As shown above, 16S rRNA data do not indicate the monophyly of the remaining Alicyclobacillus spp., but are not in significant conflict with it. The branch leading to B. tusciae is rather long, indicating a considerable degree of independent evolution (relative to the other taxa included in the tree, which include the closest relatives of B. tusciae in the current LTP release, see above). Whether the lack of ω-alicyclic fatty acids in A. pohliae and perhaps other Alicyclobacillus spp. can be used in later studies for a revision of Alicyclobacillus remains to be seen.
Table 6

Typical features of reference taxa

Bacillus tusciae T2T DSM 2912 [1]Genus Alicyclobacillus [53,54]Genus Bacillus [54]
cell shapestraight rods, 4-5 μm longrods, 1.5-6.3 μm longrods, normally up to 5 µm long
Gram stainpositivepositivepositive
oxygen requirementaerobic, facultative anaerobic, but not with nitrateaerobic, facultative anaerobicaerobic, facultative anaerobic, a few species are strictly anaerobic
endosporessubterminal, ovalterminal up to subterminalellipsoidal, central
sspE genes for acid-soluble spore proteinsmissingmissingfrequent
growth temperature>47°C to <67°C, opt. 55°C4-70°C, opt. 35-65°C10-60°C
pH optimum4.2-4.8< 4.5, (range 1.5-5)5-10
phenotypethermoacidophilethermoacidophilessome obligate or facultative thermophiles
habitatponds in solfatara of geothermal areaacidic geothermal sites (soil and water), fruit juices, oresoften saprophytes in decaying organic matter
flagellationsingle lateral flagellummotility reported for some speciesmotile or nonmotile; lateral
menaquinonesMK-7(personal communication Brian J. Tindall)MK-7MK-7
major membranous lipid componentsno ω-alicyclic fatty acids (personal communication Brian J. Tindall)Large amounts (>80%) of ω-alicyclic fatty acids with six- or seven carbon rings, such as ω-cyclohexane undecanoic acid -C17:0 and ω-cyclohexane tridecanoic acid -C19:0. Three species do not possess these fatty acids. Some strains are known to form hopanoids.cellular fatty acids: ai-C15:0, i-C15:0, ai-C15:0;no ω-alicyclic fatty acids
oxidase/catalaseweak/weak±/±±/±
Inclusion bodiespoly-β-hydroxybutyric acid when grown autotrophically under ammonium starvationnot specifiedsome species
energy metabolismgrows best under autotrophic conditions, chemolithoautotrophic with H2 and CO2, but also chemoorganoheterotrophic; does not metabolize sugarschemoorganotrophic or mixotrophic;carbohydrates, organic acids and amino acids can be utilized. Mixotrophic species utilize Fe2+ and S0chemoorganotrophic
On the basis of the above-mentioned physiological, chemotaxonomic and phylogenetic characteristics of strain T2T, a novel genus is proposed, Kyrpidia, as the second genus in the parent family Alicyclobacillaceae, and a novel species is proposed, Kyrpidia tusciae sp. nov., comb. nov. Comparative characteristics of strain T2T are given in Table 1. Furthermore the phylogenetic analysis as shown in Figure 1 clearly supports the assignment of the genus Tumebacillus to the family Alicyclobacillaceae.

Emended description of the family Alicyclobacillaceae da Costa and Rainey 2010.

The description of the family Alicyclobacillaceae is given by da Costa and Rainey 2010 in [54]. Acid may be produced from carbohydrates or not. The family is comprised of the genera Alicyclobacillus, Tumebacillus and Kyrpidia.

Description of Kyrpidia gen. nov.

Kyrpidia (Kyr.pi´di.a N.L. fem. n. Kyrpidia named in honor of Nikolaos C. Kyrpides, a Greek-American genomics scientist, who co-initiated the Genomic Encyclopedia of Archaea and Bacteria). Cells are straight rods, 1.5 to 5 μm long, facultatively anaerobic, Gram-positive, chemolitooautotrophic or chemoorganoheterotrophic. Thermoacidophilic; growth occurs above 42°C and below 67°C, with an optimum at 55°C, and at pH 4.2-7.5. Endospores are formed, but sspE genes for acid-soluble spore proteins are not found. The predominant menaquinone is MK-7. Major fatty acids are iso-C15:0 and iso-C17:0; ω-alicyclic fatty acids are not present. The mol% G + C content of the type strain of the type species is 59.11 mol%. The type species is Kyrpidia tusciae. Kyrpidia is a member of the Alicyclobacillaceae.

Description of Kyrpidia tusciae (Bonjour & Aragno 1984) comb. nov.

Kyrpidia tusciae (tus´ci.ae L. gen.n. tusciae from Tuscia; named after Tuscia, a region in central Italy where the Etruscians (Tuscii) lived and where the organism was found.) Basonym: Bacillus tusciae Bonjour and Aragno 1984. The genus Kyrpidia is comprised of one species Kyrpidia tusciae. The characteristics of the species are given in the genus description and the description given by Bonjour and Aragno [1]. The type strain is T2T (= DSM 2912 = NBRC 15312).
  28 in total

1.  Selection of conserved blocks from multiple alignments for their use in phylogenetic analysis.

Authors:  J Castresana
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2000-04       Impact factor: 16.240

2.  GenePRIMP: a gene prediction improvement pipeline for prokaryotic genomes.

Authors:  Amrita Pati; Natalia N Ivanova; Natalia Mikhailova; Galina Ovchinnikova; Sean D Hooper; Athanasios Lykidis; Nikos C Kyrpides
Journal:  Nat Methods       Date:  2010-05-02       Impact factor: 28.547

3.  Greengenes, a chimera-checked 16S rRNA gene database and workbench compatible with ARB.

Authors:  T Z DeSantis; P Hugenholtz; N Larsen; M Rojas; E L Brodie; K Keller; T Huber; D Dalevi; P Hu; G L Andersen
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2006-07       Impact factor: 4.792

4.  Extremely variable conservation of γ-type small, acid-soluble proteins from spores of some species in the bacterial order Bacillales.

Authors:  Jay Vyas; Jesse Cox; Barbara Setlow; William H Coleman; Peter Setlow
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2011-02-11       Impact factor: 3.490

5.  The Genomes On Line Database (GOLD) in 2009: status of genomic and metagenomic projects and their associated metadata.

Authors:  Konstantinos Liolios; I-Min A Chen; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Nektarios Tavernarakis; Philip Hugenholtz; Victor M Markowitz; Nikos C Kyrpides
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2009-11-13       Impact factor: 16.971

6.  The phylogenetic diversity of thermophilic members of the genus Bacillus as revealed by 16S rDNA analysis.

Authors:  F A Rainey; D Fritze; E Stackebrandt
Journal:  FEMS Microbiol Lett       Date:  1994-01-15       Impact factor: 2.742

7.  A phylogeny-driven genomic encyclopaedia of Bacteria and Archaea.

Authors:  Dongying Wu; Philip Hugenholtz; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Rüdiger Pukall; Eileen Dalin; Natalia N Ivanova; Victor Kunin; Lynne Goodwin; Martin Wu; Brian J Tindall; Sean D Hooper; Amrita Pati; Athanasios Lykidis; Stefan Spring; Iain J Anderson; Patrik D'haeseleer; Adam Zemla; Mitchell Singer; Alla Lapidus; Matt Nolan; Alex Copeland; Cliff Han; Feng Chen; Jan-Fang Cheng; Susan Lucas; Cheryl Kerfeld; Elke Lang; Sabine Gronow; Patrick Chain; David Bruce; Edward M Rubin; Nikos C Kyrpides; Hans-Peter Klenk; Jonathan A Eisen
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2009-12-24       Impact factor: 49.962

8.  The minimum information about a genome sequence (MIGS) specification.

Authors:  Dawn Field; George Garrity; Tanya Gray; Norman Morrison; Jeremy Selengut; Peter Sterk; Tatiana Tatusova; Nicholas Thomson; Michael J Allen; Samuel V Angiuoli; Michael Ashburner; Nelson Axelrod; Sandra Baldauf; Stuart Ballard; Jeffrey Boore; Guy Cochrane; James Cole; Peter Dawyndt; Paul De Vos; Claude DePamphilis; Robert Edwards; Nadeem Faruque; Robert Feldman; Jack Gilbert; Paul Gilna; Frank Oliver Glöckner; Philip Goldstein; Robert Guralnick; Dan Haft; David Hancock; Henning Hermjakob; Christiane Hertz-Fowler; Phil Hugenholtz; Ian Joint; Leonid Kagan; Matthew Kane; Jessie Kennedy; George Kowalchuk; Renzo Kottmann; Eugene Kolker; Saul Kravitz; Nikos Kyrpides; Jim Leebens-Mack; Suzanna E Lewis; Kelvin Li; Allyson L Lister; Phillip Lord; Natalia Maltsev; Victor Markowitz; Jennifer Martiny; Barbara Methe; Ilene Mizrachi; Richard Moxon; Karen Nelson; Julian Parkhill; Lita Proctor; Owen White; Susanna-Assunta Sansone; Andrew Spiers; Robert Stevens; Paul Swift; Chris Taylor; Yoshio Tateno; Adrian Tett; Sarah Turner; David Ussery; Bob Vaughan; Naomi Ward; Trish Whetzel; Ingio San Gil; Gareth Wilson; Anil Wipat
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2008-05       Impact factor: 54.908

9.  Standard operating procedure for calculating genome-to-genome distances based on high-scoring segment pairs.

Authors:  Alexander F Auch; Hans-Peter Klenk; Markus Göker
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2010-01-28

10.  Digital DNA-DNA hybridization for microbial species delineation by means of genome-to-genome sequence comparison.

Authors:  Alexander F Auch; Mathias von Jan; Hans-Peter Klenk; Markus Göker
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2010-01-28
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  14 in total

1.  Genome Diversity of Spore-Forming Firmicutes.

Authors:  Michael Y Galperin
Journal:  Microbiol Spectr       Date:  2013-12

2.  Thermophilic Coenzyme B12-Dependent Acyl Coenzyme A (CoA) Mutase from Kyrpidia tusciae DSM 2912 Preferentially Catalyzes Isomerization of (R)-3-Hydroxybutyryl-CoA and 2-Hydroxyisobutyryl-CoA.

Authors:  Maria-Teresa Weichler; Nadya Kurteva-Yaneva; Denise Przybylski; Judith Schuster; Roland H Müller; Hauke Harms; Thore Rohwerder
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2015-04-24       Impact factor: 4.792

3.  Thermophilic Chloroflexi Dominate in the Microbial Community Associated with Coal-Fire Gas Vents in the Kuznetsk Coal Basin, Russia.

Authors:  Vitaly V Kadnikov; Andrey V Mardanov; Alexey V Beletsky; Mikhail A Grigoriev; Olga V Karnachuk; Nikolai V Ravin
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4.  The state of standards in genomic sciences.

Authors:  George M Garrity
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2011-12-31

5.  Phylogeny-driven target selection for large-scale genome-sequencing (and other) projects.

Authors:  Markus Göker; Hans-Peter Klenk
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2013-05-20

6.  Complete genome sequence of Planctomyces brasiliensis type strain (DSM 5305(T)), phylogenomic analysis and reclassification of Planctomycetes including the descriptions of Gimesia gen. nov., Planctopirus gen. nov. and Rubinisphaera gen. nov. and emended descriptions of the order Planctomycetales and the family Planctomycetaceae.

Authors:  Carmen Scheuner; Brian J Tindall; Megan Lu; Matt Nolan; Alla Lapidus; Jan-Fang Cheng; Lynne Goodwin; Sam Pitluck; Marcel Huntemann; Konstantinos Liolios; Ioanna Pagani; Konstantinos Mavromatis; Natalia Ivanova; Amrita Pati; Amy Chen; Krishna Palaniappan; Cynthia D Jeffries; Loren Hauser; Miriam Land; Romano Mwirichia; Manfred Rohde; Birte Abt; John C Detter; Tanja Woyke; Jonathan A Eisen; Victor Markowitz; Philip Hugenholtz; Markus Göker; Nikos C Kyrpides; Hans-Peter Klenk
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2014-12-08

7.  Standards in Genomic Sciences: New beginnings to reflect the association between the journal and BMC.

Authors:  George M Garrity
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2014-12-08

8.  High-quality draft genome sequence of Effusibacillus lacus strain skLN1T, facultative anaerobic spore-former isolated from freshwater lake sediment.

Authors:  Miho Watanabe; Riho Tokizawa; Hisaya Kojima; Manabu Fukui
Journal:  Stand Genomic Sci       Date:  2017-12-13

9.  Genomic determinants of sporulation in Bacilli and Clostridia: towards the minimal set of sporulation-specific genes.

Authors:  Michael Y Galperin; Sergei L Mekhedov; Pere Puigbo; Sergey Smirnov; Yuri I Wolf; Daniel J Rigden
Journal:  Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-08-13       Impact factor: 5.491

10.  CVTree3 Web Server for Whole-genome-based and Alignment-free Prokaryotic Phylogeny and Taxonomy.

Authors:  Guanghong Zuo; Bailin Hao
Journal:  Genomics Proteomics Bioinformatics       Date:  2015-11-10       Impact factor: 7.691

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