| Literature DB >> 22180816 |
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
Classification and general features of Kyrpidia tusciae strain T2T according to the MIGS recommendations [2] and the NamesforLife database [3].
| | | | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Current classification | Domain | TAS [ | |
| Phylum | TAS [ | ||
| Class | TAS [ | ||
| Order | TAS [ | ||
| Family | TAS [ | ||
| Genus | TAS [ | ||
| Species | TAS [ | ||
| Type strain T2 | TAS [ | ||
| Revised classification | Family | TAS [ | |
| Genus | NAS | ||
| Species | NAS | ||
| Gram stain | positive | TAS [ | |
| Cell shape | straight rods | TAS [ | |
| Motility | not reported, but lateral flagella visible | TAS [ | |
| Sporulation | sporulating | TAS [ | |
| Temperature range | thermophile, grows > 47°, < 65°C | TAS [ | |
| Optimum temperature | 55°C | TAS [ | |
| Salinity | not reported | ||
| MIGS-22 | Oxygen requirement | aerobic | TAS [ |
| Carbon source | short chain fatty acids, amino acids and alcohols | TAS [ | |
| Energy metabolism | facultatively chemolithoautotroph | TAS [ | |
| MIGS-6 | Habitat | hot, acidic solfatara fields | TAS [ |
| MIGS-15 | Biotic relationship | free living | TAS [ |
| MIGS-14 | Pathogenicity | none | NAS |
| Biosafety level | 1 | TAS [ | |
| Isolation | ponds in solfatara | TAS [ | |
| MIGS-4 | Geographic location | San Frederigo, near Lago, Tuscany (Italy) | TAS [ |
| MIGS-5 | Sample collection time | about or before 1984 | TAS [ |
| MIGS-4.1 | Latitude | 43.33 | 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].
Figure 1Phylogenetic 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].
Figure 2Scanning electron micrograph of B. tusciae strain T2T
Genome sequencing project information
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| 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 |
Genome Statistics
| | | |
|---|---|---|
| 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 3Graphical 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.
Number of genes associated with the general COG functional categories
| | | | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 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 |
Genome-to-genome distances as calculated using GGDC [49-51].
| | | | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.0000 | 0.9916 | 0.97030 | |
| 0.9902/0.1452 | 0.0000 | 0.9908 | |
| 0.9646/0.1629 | 0.9893/0.1366 | 0.0000 |
Figure 4Unrooted 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.
Figure 5Venn diagram depicting the intersections of protein sets between the target genome and representative genomes of Bacillus and Alicyclobacillus.
Typical features of reference taxa
| Genus | Genus | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| cell shape | straight rods, 4-5 μm long | rods, 1.5-6.3 μm long | rods, normally up to 5 µm long |
| Gram stain | positive | positive | positive |
| oxygen requirement | aerobic, facultative anaerobic, but not with nitrate | aerobic, facultative anaerobic | aerobic, facultative anaerobic, a few species are strictly anaerobic |
| endospores | subterminal, oval | terminal up to subterminal | ellipsoidal, central |
| missing | missing | frequent | |
| growth temperature | >47°C to <67°C, opt. 55°C | 4-70°C, opt. 35-65°C | 10-60°C |
| pH optimum | 4.2-4.8 | < 4.5, (range 1.5-5) | 5-10 |
| phenotype | thermoacidophile | thermoacidophiles | some obligate or facultative thermophiles |
| habitat | ponds in solfatara of geothermal area | acidic geothermal sites (soil and water), fruit juices, ores | often saprophytes in decaying organic matter |
| flagellation | single lateral flagellum | motility reported for some species | motile or nonmotile; lateral |
| menaquinones | MK-7 | MK-7 | MK-7 |
| major membranous lipid components | no ω-alicyclic fatty acids ( | 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; |
| oxidase/catalase | weak/weak | ±/± | ±/± |
| Inclusion bodies | poly-β-hydroxybutyric acid when grown autotrophically under ammonium starvation | not specified | some species |
| energy metabolism | grows best under autotrophic conditions, chemolithoautotrophic with H2 and CO2, but also chemoorganoheterotrophic; does not metabolize sugars | chemoorganotrophic or mixotrophic; | chemoorganotrophic |