6533b833fe1ef96bd129b780
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Canibacter oris gen. nov., sp. nov., isolated from an infected human wound.
A. F. YassinM. Aravena-romanTimothy J. J. InglisPeter SchumannC Sieringsubject
DNA BacterialMolecular Sequence DataPeptidoglycanMicrobiologyRibotypingCanibacter orisMicrobiologyRibotypingDogsGenusRNA Ribosomal 16SActinomycetalesAnimalsHumansBites and StingsGeneEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsPhylogenyBase CompositionbiologyStrain (chemistry)Phylogenetic treeVitamin K 2General MedicineSequence Analysis DNAMiddle Agedbiology.organism_classification16S ribosomal RNABacterial Typing TechniquesFemaleBacteriadescription
A facultatively anaerobic, Gram-reaction-positive, catalase- and oxidase-negative, rod-shaped bacterium isolated from an infected human wound caused by a dog bite was characterized by phenotypic and molecular genetic methods. Phylogenetic analysis based on 16S rRNA gene sequences showed that strain IMMIB Q2029717T was a member of the order Micrococcales of the class Actinobacteria , displaying 91.6 % to 96 % sequence similarity with members of the family Microbacteriaceae . Phylogentic trees generated by different algorithms indicated that the strain forms an independent phylogenetic line of descent that consistently clustered proximal to the base of the genus Leucobacter . Chemical studies revealed the presence of a cell-wall murein based on l-lysine (type B1α), major menaquinone (MK-10) and a DNA G+C content of 56.9 mol%. The distinct phylogenetic position, ribotyping and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight MS profiles and the significant phenotypic differences clearly separate strain IMMIB Q2029717T from its nearest phylogenetic neighbour and support its classification as a representative of a novel genus and species, with the suggested name Canibacter oris gen. nov., sp. nov. The type strain is IMMIB Q2029717T ( = DSM 27064T = CCUG 64069T).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2014-05-01 | International journal of systematic and evolutionary microbiology |