| Literature DB >> 32847787 |
Pavla Holochová1, Ivana Mašlaňová2, Ivo Sedláček1, Pavel Švec1, Stanislava Králová1, Vojtěch Kovařovic2, Hans-Jürgen Busse3, Eva Staňková1, Miloš Barták4, Roman Pantůček5.
Abstract
Bacteria of the genus Massilia often colonize extreme ecosystems, however, a detailed study of the massilias from the Antarctic environment has not yet been performed. Here, sixty-four Gram-stain-negative, aerobic, motile rods isolated from different environmental samples on James Ross Island (Antarctica) were subjected to a polyphasic taxonomic study. The psychrophilic isolates exhibited slowly growing, moderately slimy colonies revealing bold pink-red pigmentation on R2A agar. The set of strains exhibited the highest 16S rRNA gene sequence similarities (99.5-99.9%) to Massilia violaceinigra B2T and Massilia atriviolacea SODT and formed several phylogenetic groups based on the analysis of gyrB and lepA genes. Phenotypic characteristics allowed four of them to be distinguished from each other and from their closest relatives. Compared to the nearest phylogenetic neighbours the set of six genome-sequenced representatives exhibited considerable phylogenetic distance at the whole-genome level. Bioinformatic analysis of the genomic sequences revealed a high number of putative genes involved in oxidative stress response, heavy-metal resistance, bacteriocin production, the presence of putative genes involved in nitrogen metabolism and auxin biosynthesis. The identification of putative genes encoding aromatic dioxygenases suggests the biotechnology potential of the strains. Based on these results four novel species and one genomospecies of the genus Massilia are described and named Massilia rubra sp. nov. (P3094T=CCM 8692T=LMG 31213T), Massilia aquatica sp. nov. (P3165T=CCM 8693T=LMG 31211T), Massilia mucilaginosa sp. nov. (P5902T=CCM 8733T=LMG 31210T), and Massilia frigida sp. nov. (P5534T=CCM 8695T=LMG 31212T).Entities:
Keywords: Antarctica; Massilia; Oxalobacteraceae; Polyphasic taxonomy; Psychrophilic bacteria; Whole-genome sequence
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32847787 DOI: 10.1016/j.syapm.2020.126112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Appl Microbiol ISSN: 0723-2020 Impact factor: 4.022