DOI

  • Carmen Scheuner
  • Brian J. Tindall
  • Megan Lu
  • Matt Nolan
  • Jan Fang Cheng
  • Lynne Goodwin
  • Sam Pitluck
  • Marcel Huntemann
  • Konstantinos Liolios
  • Ioanna Pagani
  • Konstantinos Mavromatis
  • Natalia Ivanova
  • Amrita Pati
  • Amy Chen
  • Krishna Palaniappan
  • Cynthia D. Jeffries
  • Loren Hauser
  • Miriam Land
  • Romano Mwirichia
  • Manfred Rohde
  • Birte Abt
  • John C. Detter
  • Tanja Woyke
  • Jonathan A. Eisen
  • Victor Markowitz
  • Philip Hugenholtz
  • Markus Göker
  • Nikos C. Kyrpides
  • Hans Peter Klenk

Planctomyces brasiliensis Schlesner 1990 belongs to the order Planctomycetales, which differs from other bacterial taxa by several distinctive features such as internal cell compartmentalization, multiplication by forming buds directly from the spherical, ovoid or pear-shaped mother cell and a cell wall consisting of a proteinaceous layer rather than a peptidoglycan layer. The first strains of P. brasiliensis, including the type strain IFAM 1448T, were isolated from a water sample of Lagoa Vermelha, a salt pit near Rio de Janeiro, Brasil. This is the second completed genome sequence of a type strain of the genus Planctomyces to be published and the sixth type strain genome sequence from the family Planctomycetaceae. The 6,006,602 bp long genome with its 4,811 protein-coding and 54 RNA genes is a part of the Genomic Encyclopedia of Bacteria and Archaea project. Phylogenomic analyses indicate that the classification within the Planctomycetaceae is partially in conflict with its evolutionary history, as the positioning of Schlesneria renders the genus Planctomyces paraphyletic. A re-analysis of published fatty-acid measurements also does not support the current arrangement of the two genera. A quantitative comparison of phylogenetic and phenotypic aspects indicates that the three Planctomyces species with type strains available in public culture collections should be placed in separate genera. Thus the genera Gimesia, Planctopirus and Rubinisphaera are proposed to accommodate P. maris, P. limnophilus and P. brasiliensis, respectively. Pronounced differences between the reported G + C content of Gemmata obscuriglobus, Singulisphaera acidiphila and Zavarzinella formosa and G + C content calculated from their genome sequences call for emendation of their species descriptions. In addition to other features, the range of G + C values reported for the genera within the Planctomycetaceae indicates that the descriptions of the family and the order should be emended.

Original languageEnglish
Article number10
JournalStandards in Genomic Sciences
Volume9
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 8 Dec 2014

    Scopus subject areas

  • Genetics

    Research areas

  • GEBA, Gram-negative, Halotolerant, Non-peptidoglycan bacteria, Planctomycetales, Planctomycetes, Stalked bacteria, Taxonomic descriptions

ID: 36051277