Literature DB >> 24501646

Complete genome sequence of Granulicella mallensis type strain MP5ACTX8(T), an acidobacterium from tundra soil.

Suman R Rawat1, Minna K Männistö2, Valentin Starovoytov3, Lynne Goodwin4, Matt Nolan5, Loren J Hauser6, Miriam Land6, Karen Walston Davenport4, Tanja Woyke5, Max M Häggblom1.   

Abstract

Granulicella mallensis MP5ACTX8(T) is a novel species of the genus Granulicella in subdivision 1of Acidobacteria. G. mallensis is of ecological interest being a member of the dominant soil bacterial community active at low temperatures and nutrient limiting conditions in Arctic alpine tundra. G. mallensis is a cold-adapted acidophile and a versatile heterotroph that hydrolyzes a suite of sugars and complex polysaccharides. Genome analysis revealed metabolic versatility with genes involved in metabolism and transport of carbohydrates. These include gene modules encoding the carbohydrate-active enzyme (CAZyme) family involved in breakdown, utilization and biosynthesis of diverse structural and storage polysaccharides including plant based carbon polymers. The genome of Granulicella mallensis MP5ACTX8(T) consists of a single replicon of 6,237,577 base pairs (bp) with 4,907 protein-coding genes and 53 RNA genes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Acidobacteria; acidophile; cold adapted; tundra soil

Year:  2013        PMID: 24501646      PMCID: PMC3910553          DOI: 10.4056/sigs.4328031

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


Introduction

Strain MP5ACTX8T (= ATCC BAA-1857T = DSM 23137T), is the type strain of the species [1]. The genus in subdivision 1 of , was first described by Pankratov et al. in 2010 [2]. (mal.len' sis. N. L. fem. adj. mallensis; pertaining to its isolation from soil of Malla Nature Reserve, Kilpisjärvi, Finland; 69°01’N, 20°50’E) was described along with other species of the genus isolated from tundra soil [1] and is one of the two with sequenced genomes, out of eight validly described species. is one of the most ubiquitous bacterial phyla found in diverse habitats and is abundant in most soil environments [3,4] including Arctic tundra soils [5,6]. are phylogenetically and physiologically diverse [7] represented by 26 phylogenetic subdivisions [8] of which only subdivisions 1, 3, 4, 8, and 10 are defined by taxonomically characterized representatives. To date, subdivision 1 is comprised of eight genera: [9], [10,11], [12], [1,2], Acidipila [13], [14], [15] and [16]. Subdivision 3, 4 and 10 include only one genus each, namely [17], [18] and Thermotomaculum [19], respectively, while subdivision 8 includes three genera; [20], [21] and [22]. Three species, ‘Candidatus Koribacter versatilis’ [23], ‘Candidatus Solibacter usitatus’ [23] and ‘Candidatus Chloracidobacterium thermophilum’ [24] have been described as ‘Candidatus’ taxa. are relatively difficult to cultivate with slow growth rates and typically require up to several weeks to develop visible colonies on solid media. Nevertheless, the phylogenetic diversity, ubiquity and abundance of this group suggest that they play important ecological roles in soils. The abundance of has been found to correlate with soil pH [25,26] and carbon [27,28], with subdivision 1 being most abundant in slightly acidic soils. Our previous studies have shown that dominate in the acidic tundra heaths of northern Finland [25,29-31]. Using selective isolation techniques we have been able to isolate several slow growing and fastidious strains of [1,11]. On the basis of phylogenetic, phenotypic and chemotaxonomic data, including 16S rRNA, rpoB gene sequence similarity and DNA–DNA hybridization, strain MP5ACTX8T was classified as a novel species of the genus [1]. Here, we summarize the physiological features together with the complete genome sequence, annotation and data analysis of MP5ACTX8T (Table 1).
Table 1

Classification and general features of strain MP5ACTX8T according to the MIGS recommendations [32]

MIGS ID      Property      Term     Evidence codea
      Classification      Domain Bacteria     TAS [33]
      Phylum Acidobacteria     TAS [34,35]
      Class Acidobacteria     TAS [36,37]
      Order Acidobacteriales     TAS [36,38]
      Family Acidobacteriaceae     TAS [34,39]
      Genus Granulicella     TAS [1,2]
      Species Granulicella mallensis     TAS [1]
      Type strain: MP5ACTX8T (= ATCC BAA-1857T = DSM 23137T)
      Gram stain      negative     TAS [1]
      Cell shape      rod     TAS [1]
      Motility      non-motile     TAS [1]
      Sporulation      not reported     NAS
      Temperature range      4–28 °C     TAS [1]
      Optimum temperature      24–27 °C     TAS [1]
      pH range      3.5–6.5     TAS [1]
      Optimum pH      5     TAS [1]
      Carbon source      D-glucose, maltose, D-fructose,      D-galactose, lactose, lactulose,      D-mannose, D-ribose, raffinose, sucrose, trehalose, cellobiose,      D-xylose, glucuronate     TAS [1]
MIGS-6      Habitat      terrestrial     TAS [1]
MIGS-6.3      Salinity      Growth with up to 1.5% NaCl     TAS [1]
MIGS-22      Oxygen requirement      aerobic     TAS [1]
MIGS-15      Biotic relationship      free-living     TAS [1]
MIGS-14      Pathogenicity      non-pathogenic     NAS
MIGS-4      Geographic location      Arctic-alpine tundra, Finland     TAS [1]
MIGS-5      Sample collection      2006     TAS [1]
MIGS-4.1      Latitude      69°01’N,      TAS [1]
MIGS-4.2      Longitude      20°50’E
MIGS-4.4      Altitude      700 m     TAS [1]

aEvidence codes - IDA: Inferred from Direct Assay; 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 [40].

aEvidence codes - IDA: Inferred from Direct Assay; 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 [40].

Classification and features

Within the genus , eight species are described with validly published names: MP5ACTX8T, MP5ACTX9T, MP5ACTX2T and S6CTX5AT isolated from Arctic tundra soil [1] and OB1010T, TPB6011T, TPO1014T and TPB6028T isolated from sphagnum peat bogs [3]. Strain MP5ACTX8T showed 95.5 -96.1% 16S rRNA gene sequence identity to tundra soil strains, MP5ACTX9T (95.5%), S6CTX5AT (96.2%) and MP5ACTX2T (96.1%) and 94.6 – 97.4% to TPO1014T (94.6%), TPB6028T (96.0%), TPB6011T (96.1%), OB1010T (96.5%) and LCBR1 (97.4%). Phylogenetic analysis based on the 16S rRNA gene of taxonomically classified strains of family placed type strain OB1010 T as the closest taxonomically classified relative of MP5ACTX8T (Figure 1).
Figure 1

Phylogenetic tree highlighting the position of MP5ACTX8T (shown in bold) relative to the other type strains within SD1 . The maximum likelihood tree was inferred from 1,361 aligned positions of the 16S rRNA gene sequences and derived based on the Tamura-Nei model using MEGA 5 [41]. Bootstrap values >50 (expressed as percentages of 1,000 replicates) are shown at branch points. Bar: 0.02 substitutions per nucleotide position. The corresponding GenBank accession numbers are displayed in parentheses. Strains whose genomes have been sequenced, are marked with an asterisk; MP5ACTX8T (CP003130), MP5ACTX9T (CP002480), SP1PR4T (CP002467), KBS63T (CP003379) and ATCC 51196T (CP001472). MPL3 (AM162405) in SD3 was used as an outgroup.

Phylogenetic tree highlighting the position of MP5ACTX8T (shown in bold) relative to the other type strains within SD1 . The maximum likelihood tree was inferred from 1,361 aligned positions of the 16S rRNA gene sequences and derived based on the Tamura-Nei model using MEGA 5 [41]. Bootstrap values >50 (expressed as percentages of 1,000 replicates) are shown at branch points. Bar: 0.02 substitutions per nucleotide position. The corresponding GenBank accession numbers are displayed in parentheses. Strains whose genomes have been sequenced, are marked with an asterisk; MP5ACTX8T (CP003130), MP5ACTX9T (CP002480), SP1PR4T (CP002467), KBS63T (CP003379) and ATCC 51196T (CP001472). MPL3 (AM162405) in SD3 was used as an outgroup.

Morphology and physiology

grows on R2 medium (Difco) at pH 3.5–6.5 (optimum pH 5) and at +4 to +28 °C (optimum 24–27 °C) [1]. On R2 agar, strain MP5ACTX8T forms opaque white mucoid colonies with a diameter of approximately 1 mm. Cells are Gram-negative, non-motile, aerobic rods, approximately 0.5–0.7 mm wide and 0.6–1.3 mm long. Growth observed with up to 1.5% NaCl (w/v) (Table 1). The cell-wall structure in ultrathin sections of electron micrographs of cells of MP5ACTX8T is shown in Figure 2.
Figure 2

Electron micrograph of MP5ACTX8T.

Electron micrograph of MP5ACTX8T. utilizes D-glucose, maltose, cellobiose, D-fructose, D-galactose, lactose, lactulose, D-mannose, D-ribose, raffinose, sucrose, trehalose, D-xylose, N-acetyl-D-glucosamine, glucuronate, glutamate, melezitose and salicin, but does not utilize D-arabinose, acetate, formate, pyruvate, malate, mannitol, D- or L-alanine, D-glycine, L-leucine, L-ornithine, gluconic acid, aspartate, dulcitol, butyrate, caproate, valerate, lactate, oxalate, propionate, fumarate, adonitol, methanol, ethanol, succinate, D-sorbitol or myoinositol, when grown using VL55 mineral medium with 100 mg yeast extract l-1. hydrolyzes aesculin, starch, pectin, laminarin and lichenan, but not gelatin, cellulose, xylan, sodium alginate, pullulan, chitosan or chitin on R2 medium. Strains show positive reaction for acid and alkaline phosphatases, leucine arylamidase, a-chymotrypsin, naphthol-AS-BI-phosphohydrolase, α- and β-galactosidases, α- and β-glucosidases, N-acetyl- β-glucosaminidase, β-glucuronidase, trypsin and valine arylamidase, but negative for α-fucosidase, α-mannosidase, esterase (C4 and C8), lipase (C14) and cystine arylamidase. Strain MP5ACTX8T reduces nitrate to nitrite. Strain MP5ACTX8T is resistant to the antibiotics erythromycin, chloramphenicol, neomycin, rifampicin, streptomycin, gentamicin, polymyxin B and penicillin, but susceptible to ampicillin, kanamycin, tetracycline, lincomycin, novobiocin and bacitracin [1].

Chemotaxonomy

The major cellular fatty acids in are iso-C15:0 (45.3%), C16:1ω7c (28.7%), iso-C13:0 (8.3%) and C16:0 (8.9%). The cellular fatty acid compositions of strain MP5ACTX8T were relatively similar to that of other strains with fatty acids iso-C15:0 and C16:1ω7c being most abundant in all strains. Strain MP5ACTX8T contains MK-8 as the major quinone.

Genome sequencing and annotation

Genome project history

strain MP5ACTX8T was selected for sequencing in 2009 by the DOE Joint Genome Institute (JGI) community sequencing program. The Quality Draft (QD) assembly and annotation were completed on December 26, 2010. The complete genome was made available on Dec. 1, 2011. The genome project is deposited in the Genomes On-Line Database (GOLD) [42] and the complete genome sequence of strain MP5ACTX8T is deposited in GenBank (CP003130). Table 2 presents the project information and its association with MIGS version 2.0 [32].
Table 2

Project information.

MIGS ID    Property    Term
MIGS 31    Finishing quality    Finished
MIGS-28    Libraries used    Three libraries, an Illumina GAii shotgun library (GSGY),    a 454 Titanium standard library (GSXT, GWTA) and a paired end    454 (GSFP) library
MIGS 29    Sequencing platforms    454 Titanium standard, 454 Paired End, Illumina
MIGS 31.2    Fold coverage    18.5× (454), 213× (Illumina)
MIGS 30    Assemblers    Newbler, VELVET, PHRAP
MIGS 32    Gene calling method    ProdigaL, GenePRIMP
    Locus Tag    AciX8
    Genbank ID    CP003130.1
    GenBank Date of Release    December 1, 2011
    GOLD ID    Gc02349
    BIOPROJECT    PRJNA49957, PRJNA47903
    Project relevance    Environmental, Biogeochemical cycling of Carbon, Biotechnological, GEBA

Growth conditions and genomic DNA extraction

MP5ACTX8T was cultivated on R2 medium as previously described [1]. Genomic DNA (gDNA) of high sequencing quality was isolated using a modified CTAB method and evaluated according to the Quality Control (QC) guidelines provided by the DOE Joint Genome Institute [43].

Genome sequencing and assembly

The finished genome of MP5ACTX8T (JGI ID 4088692) was generated at the DOE Joint genome Institute (JGI) using a combination of Illumina [44] and 454 technologies [45]. For this genome, an Illumina GAii shotgun library which generated 59,701,420 reads totaling 4537.3 Mb, a 454 Titanium standard library which generated 136,708 reads and a paired end 454 library with an average insert size of 10.3 kb which generated 157,336 reads totaling 172.0 Mb of 454 data, were constructed and sequenced. All general aspects of library construction and sequencing performed at the JGI can be found at the JGI website [43]. The 454 Titanium standard data and the 454 paired end data were assembled with Newbler, version 2.3. Illumina sequencing data was assembled with Velvet, version 0.7.63 [46]. The 454 Newbler consensus shreds, the Illumina Velvet consensus shreds and the read pairs in the 454 paired end library were integrated using parallel phrap, version SPS - 4.24 (High Performance Software, LLC) [47]. The software Consed [48] was used in the finishing process. The Phred/Phrap/Consed software package [49] was used for sequence assembly and quality assessment in the subsequent finishing process. Illumina data was used to correct potential base errors and increase consensus quality using the software Polisher developed at JGI (Alla Lapidus, unpublished). Possible misassemblies were corrected using gapResolution (Cliff Han, un-published), Dupfinisher [50] or sequencing cloned bridging PCR fragments with sub-cloning. Gaps between contigs were closed by editing in Consed, by PCR and by Bubble PCR (J-F Cheng, unpublished) primer walks. The final assembly is based on 74.2 Mb of 454 data which provides an average 18.5× coverage and 1318.5 Mb of Illumina data which provides an average 213× coverage of the genome.

Genome annotation

Genes were identified using Prodigal [51] as part of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory genome annotation pipeline, followed by a round of manual curation using the JGI GenePRIMP pipeline [52]. The predicted CDSs were translated and used to search the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) non-redundant database, UniProt, TIGRFam, Pfam, PRIAM, KEGG, COGs [53,54], and InterPro. These data sources were combined to assert a product description for each predicted protein. Non-coding genes and miscellaneous features were predicted using tRNAscan-SE [55], RNAMMer [56], Rfam [57], TMHMM [58], and signalP [59]. Additional gene prediction analysis and functional annotation were performed within the Integrated Microbial Genomes Expert Review (IMG-ER) platform [60].

Genome properties

The genome consists of one circular chromosome of 6,211,694 bp in size with a GC content of 57.8 mol% and consists of 53 RNA genes (Figure 3 and Table 3). Of the 4,960 predicted genes, 4,907 are protein-coding genes (CDSs) and 90 are pseudogenes. Of the total CDSs, 70.5% represent COG functional categories and 16% consist of signal peptides. The distribution of genes into COG functional categories is presented in Figure 3 and Table 4.
Figure 3

Circular representation of the chromosome of MP5ACTX8T displaying relevant genome features. From outside to 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 and GC skew.

Table 3

Genome statistics

Attribute    Value     % of Total
Genome size (bp)    6,237,577        100
DNA coding region(bp)    5,499,388        88.2
DNA G+C content (bp)    3612173        57.9
DNA scaffolds    1        100
Total genes    4,960        100
Protein coding genes    4,907        98.9
RNA genes    53        1.3
Pseudo genes    90        1.8
Genes in internal clusters    2,679        54
Genes with function prediction    3,511        70.8
Genes assigned to COGs    3,496        70.5
Genes with Pfam domains    3,754        75.7
Genes with signal peptides    797        16.1
Genes with transmembrane helices    1,291        26.0
CRISPR repeats    0        -

The total is based on either the size of the genome in base pairs or the protein coding genes in the annotated genome.

Table 4

Number of genes associated with general COG functional categories

Code   Value   %age    Description
J   167   4.32    Translation, ribosomal structure and biogenesis
A   2   0.05    RNA processing and modification
K   332   8.58    Transcription
L   156   4.03    Replication, recombination and repair
B   1   0.03    Chromatin structure and dynamics
D   27   0.7    Cell cycle control, Cell division, chromosome partitioning
Y   0.0   0.0    Nuclear structure
V   76   1.96    Defense mechanisms
T   139   3.59    Signal transduction mechanisms
M   322   8.32    Cell wall/membrane biogenesis
N   17   0.44    Cell motility
Z   0.0   0.0    Cytoskeleton
W   0.0   0.0    Extracellular structures
U   79   2.04    Intracellular trafficking and secretion
O   123   3.18    Posttranslational modification, protein turnover, chaperones
C   193   4.99    Energy production and conversion
G   355   9.18    Carbohydrate transport and metabolism
E   258   6.67    Amino acid transport and metabolism
F   76   1.96    Nucleotide transport and metabolism
H   155   4.01    Coenzyme transport and metabolism
I   164   4.24    Lipid transport and metabolism
P   157   4.06    Inorganic ion transport and metabolism
Q   125   3.23    Secondary metabolites biosynthesis, transport and catabolism
R   527   13.62    General function prediction only
S   418   10.8    Function unknown
-   1,464   29.52    Not in COGs

The total is based on the total number of protein coding genes in the genome.

Circular representation of the chromosome of MP5ACTX8T displaying relevant genome features. From outside to 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 and GC skew. The total is based on either the size of the genome in base pairs or the protein coding genes in the annotated genome. The total is based on the total number of protein coding genes in the genome.

Discussion

type strain MP5ACTX8T has the largest genome size of 6.2 Mbp. among the three tundra soil strains of subdivision 1 [28]. Genome analysis of identified a high abundance of genes assigned to COG functional categories for transport and metabolism of carbohydrates (9.1%) and amino acids (6.7%) and involved in cell envelope biogenesis (8.3%) and transcription (8.6%). Further genome analysis revealed an abundance of gene modules encoding for functional activities within the carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZy) family [61] involved in breakdown, utilization and biosynthesis of carbohydrates. hydrolyzed complex carbon polymers, including CMC, pectin, lichenin, laminarin and starch, and utilized sugars such as cellobiose, D-mannose, D-xylose, D-trehalose. This parallels genome predictions for CDSs encoding for enzymes such as cellulases, pectinases, alginate lyases, trehalase and amylases. In addition, the genome contained a cluster of genes in the neighborhood of the cellulose synthase gene (bcsAB) which included cellulase (bscZ) (endoglucanase Y) of family GH8, cellulose synthase operon protein (bcsC) and a cellulose synthase operon protein (yhjQ) involved in cellulose biosynthesis. Detailed comparative genome analysis of MP5ACTX8T with other strains for which finished genomes were available is reported in Rawat et al. [28]. The data thus suggests that is involved in hydrolysis, the utilization of stored carbohydrates, and in the biosynthesis of exopolysaccharides from organic matter and plant based polymers in the soil. Therefore, we infer that strain may be central to carbon cycling processes in arctic and boreal soil ecosystems.
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