6533b7dcfe1ef96bd1272ac6

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Multilocus sequence analysis of putative Vibrio mediterranei strains and description of Vibrio thalassae sp. nov.

Eva TarazonaMaría-jesús PujalteM. Carmen MaciánDavid R. ArahalTeresa LucenaMaría A. Ruvira

subject

DNA BacterialAquatic OrganismsSequence analysisMolecular Sequence DataVibrio mediterraneiBiologyDNA RibosomalApplied Microbiology and BiotechnologyMicrobiologyMreBMicrobiologyBacterial ProteinsRNA Ribosomal 16SAnimalsCluster AnalysisCladeGenePhylogenyEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsVibrioGeneticsStrain (biology)SubcladeVibrio thalassaeSequence Analysis DNAMultilocus Sequence Typing

description

A multilocus sequence analysis based on partial gyrB, mreB, rpoD and pyrH genes was undertaken with 61 putative Vibrio mediterranei/V. shilonii strains from different hosts (mussels, oysters, clams, coral, fish and plankton) or habitat (seawater and sediment) and geographical origins (Mediterranean, Atlantic and Pacific). A consistent grouping was obtained with individual and concatenated gene sequences, and the clade, comprising 54 strains, was split into three subclades by all methods: subclade A (40 strains, including AK1, the former type strain of Vibrio shilonii), subclade B (8 strains) corresponding to the species V. mediterranei, and subclade C (six strains) representing a new species, V. thalassae sp. nov., with strain MD16(T) (=CECT 8203(T)=KCTC 32373(T)) as the proposed type strain. Average nucleotide identity (ANI) values, determined as a measure of genomic similarity, confirmed these assignments, and supported that strains in subclade C were a different species from V. mediterranei, with ANIb and ANIm figures lower than 90.0%. The synonymy of V. shilonii and V. mediterranei was also stressed by both MLSA and ANI determinations (97.0% between both type strains). No connection was found between geographic origin or sample type and MLSA grouping.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.syapm.2014.05.005