scholarly journals Two new scuticociliates from southern China: Uronema apomarinum sp. nov. and Homalogastra parasetosa sp. nov., with improved diagnoses of the genus Homalogastra and its type species Homalogastra setosa (Ciliophora, Oligohymenophorea)

2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 2405-2419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mingjian Liu ◽  
Lifang Li ◽  
Tengteng Zhang ◽  
Xinpeng Fan ◽  
Zhenzhen Yi ◽  
...  

The morphology of two new scuticociliates, Uronema apomarinum sp. nov. and Homalogastra parasetosa sp. nov., isolated from a mangrove wetland in Shenzhen, PR China, was studied using live observation and the protargol impregnation method. Uronema apomarinum is characterized by a body size of about 20–35×10–15 µm in vivo, a partly two-rowed membranelle 1, and 12 or 13 somatic kineties. Homalogastra parasetosa is distinguished by a membranelle 1 comprising two longitudinal rows of basal bodies. Three Homalogastra setosa populations are suggested as subjective synonyms of the new species. Improved diagnoses of the genus Homalogastra Kahl, 1926 and its type species Homalogastra setosa Kahl, 1926 are provided. Results of phylogenetic analyses based on 18S rRNA gene and ITS1-5.8S–ITS2 region sequences indicate that U. apomarinum is most closely related to U. marinum, while the closest relative of H. parasetosa is H. setosa.

Author(s):  
Caixin Yang ◽  
Yibo Bai ◽  
Kui Dong ◽  
Jing Yang ◽  
Xin-He Lai ◽  
...  

Four Gram-stain-positive, catalase-negative, non-spore-forming, rod-shaped bacterial strains (zg-325T, zg329, dk561T and dk752) were isolated from the respiratory tract of marmot (Marmota himalayana) and the faeces of Tibetan gazelle (Procapra picticaudata) from the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau of PR China. The results of 16S rRNA gene sequence-based phylogenetic analyses indicated that strains zg-325T and dk561T represent members of the genus Actinomyces , most similar to Actinomyces denticolens DSM 20671T and Actinomyces ruminicola B71T, respectively. The DNA G+C contents of strains zg-325T and dk561T were 71.6 and 69.3 mol%, respectively. The digital DNA–DNA hybridization values of strains zg-325T and dk561T with their most closely related species were below the 70 % threshold for species demarcation. The four strains grew best at 35 °C in air containing 5 % CO2 on brain heart infusion (BHI) agar with 5 % sheep blood. All four strains had C18:1ω9c and C16:0 as the major cellular fatty acids. MK-8 and MK-9 were the major menaquinones in zg-325T while MK-10 was predominant in dk561T. The major polar lipids included diphosphatidylglycerol and phosphatidylinositol. On the basis of several lines of evidence from phenotypic and phylogenetic analyses, zg-325T and dk561T represent novel species of the genus Actinomyces , for which the name Actinomyces marmotae sp. nov. and Actinomyces procaprae sp. nov. are proposed. The type strains are zg-325T (=GDMCC 1.1724T=JCM 34091T) and dk561T (=CGMCC 4.7566T=JCM 33484T). We also propose, on the basis of the phylogenetic results herein, the reclassification of Actinomyces liubingyangii and Actinomyces tangfeifanii as Boudabousia liubingyangii comb. nov. and Boudabousia tangfeifanii comb. nov., respectively.


2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (11) ◽  
pp. 5943-5949 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yun-zhen Yang ◽  
Ji-feng Chen ◽  
Wan-ru Huang ◽  
Ran-ran Zhang ◽  
Shuangjiang Liu ◽  
...  

A novel Gram-stain-negative, strictly aerobic, rod-shaped, brick red-pigmented bacterium, designated R-22-1 c-1T, was isolated from water from Baiyang Lake, Hebei Province, PR China. The strain was able to grow at 20–30 °C (optimum, 30 °C) and pH 6–7 (optimum, pH 6) in Reasoner’s 2A medium. 16S rRNA gene sequence and phylogenetic analyses of R-22-1 c-1T revealed closest relationships to Rufibacter immobilis MCC P1T (97.8 %), Rufibacter sediminis H-1T (97.9 %) and Rufibacter glacialis MDT1-10-3T (97.0 %), with other species of the genus Rufibacter showing less than 97.0 % sequence similarity. The predominant polar lipids were phosphatidylethanolamine, two unidentified aminophospholipids and three unidentified lipids. The major cellular fatty acids were iso-C15 : 0, C15 : 1  ω6c, C17 : 1  ω6c, anteiso-C15 : 0, summed feature 3 (iso-C15 : 0 2-OH and/or C16 : 1  ω7c and/or C16 : 1  ω6c) and summed feature 4 (iso-C17 : 1I and/or anteiso-C17 : 1B). The respiratory quinone was MK-7. The draft genome of R-22-1 c-1T was 5.6 Mbp in size, with a G+C content of 50.2 mol%. The average nucleotide identity and digital DNA–DNA hybridization relatedness values between strain R-22-1 c-1T and related type strains were R. immobilis MCC P1T (77.2 and 21.8 %), R. sediminis H-1T (81.6 and 21.4 %) and R. tibetensis 1351T (78.5 and 22.9 %). Based on these phylogenetic, chemotaxonomic and genotypic results, strain R-22-1 c-1T represents a novel species in the genus Rufibacter , for which the name Rufibacter latericius sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain is R-22-1 c-1T (=CGMCC 1.13570T=KCTC 62781T).


Author(s):  
Juan Zhou ◽  
Yuyuan Huang ◽  
Jing Yang ◽  
Xin-He Lai ◽  
Dong Jin ◽  
...  

Four aerobic, Gram-stain-positive, rod-shaped bacteria (HY60T, HY54, HY82T and HY89) were isolated from bat faeces of Hipposideros and Rousettus species collected in PR China. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA gene sequences indicated that the four novel strains formed two separate but adjacent subclades close to Microbacterium agarici CGMCC 1.12260T (97.6–97.7 % similarity), Microbacterium humi JCM 18706T (97.3–97.5 %) and Microbacterium lindanitolerans JCM 30493T (97.3–97.4 %). The 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity was 98.3 % between strains HY60T and HY82T, and identical within strain pairs HY60T/HY54 and HY82T/HY89. The DNA G+C contents of strains HY60T and HY82T were 61.9 and 63.3 mol%, respectively. The digital DNA–DNA hybridization and average nucleotide identity values between each novel strain and their closest relatives were all below the 70 % and 95–96 % thresholds for species delimitation, respectively. All four novel strains contained anteiso-C15 : 0, anteiso-C17 : 0, iso-C16 : 0 and iso-C15 : 0 as the main fatty acids, MK-11 and MK-12 as the major respiratory quinones, and diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol and one unidentified glycolipid as the predominant polar lipids. The cell-wall peptidoglycan was of B type and contained alanine, glutamate, glycine and ornithine. The acyl type of the muramic acid was glycolyl. The whole-cell sugars were rhamnose and ribose. Based on the foregoing polyphasic analyses, it was concluded that the four uncharacterized strains represented two novel species of the genus Microbacterium , for which the names Microbacterium chengjingii sp. nov. [type strain HY60T (=CGMCC 1.17468T=GDMCC 1.1951T=KACC 22102T)] and Microbacterium fandaimingii sp. nov. [type strain HY82T (=CGMCC 1.17469T=GDMCC 1.1949T=KACC 22101T)] are proposed, respectively.


Author(s):  
Qing Liu ◽  
Hong-Can Liu ◽  
Lei-Lei Yang ◽  
Yu-Hua Xin

The genus Flavobacterium (family Flavobacteriaceae ) can be found in diverse environments. In this study, seven novel strains were isolated from glaciers in PR China and subjected to taxonomic research. Phylogenetic analyses based on the 16S rRNA gene revealed that the strains belonged to the genus Flavobacterium . None of the seven strains grew at temperatures above 22 °C, indicating that they are psychrophilic. Furthermore, the average nucleotide identity (ANI) values of the seven strains were calculated and indicated that they represented two novel species in Flavobacterium . Strain LB3P56T was most closely related to Flavobacterium soyangense IMCC26223T (97.70 %) and strain GSP16T was most closely related to Flavobacterium sinopsychrotolerans 0533T (98.03 %). The ANI values between the two Flavobacterium strains and their closest relatives were less than 83.47 %, which was much lower than the threshold for species delineation of 95–96 %. Therefore, we propose two novel species, Flavobacterium franklandianum sp. nov. (LB3P56T=CGMCC 1.11934T=NBRC 113651T) and Flavobacterium gawalongense sp. nov. (GSP16T=CGMCC 1.24642T=NBRC 113664T).


2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (9) ◽  
pp. 4867-4873 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guang-Da Feng ◽  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Wendi Chen ◽  
Sheng-Nan Wang ◽  
Honghui Zhu

Two novel strains, designated 92R-1T and 9PBR-1T, were isolated from abandoned lead–zinc ore collected in Meizhou, Guangdong Province, PR China. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA gene sequences showed that they fell into the genus of Hymenobacte r and formed two distinct lineages. Strain 92R-1T was most closely related to Hymenobacter wooponensis JCM 19491T (98.7 %) and Hymenobacter gelipurpurascens LMG 21873T (98.5 %), while strain 9PBR-1T was most closely related to Hymenobacter chitinivorans LMG 21951T (99.0 %), Hymenobacter elongatus JCM 17223T (98.7 %) and Hymenobacter aquaticus JCM 31653T (98.1 %). Strain 92R-1Tshared average nucleotide identity values of 80.0–83.7 % and digital DNA–DNA hybridization values of 23.1–27.1 % with its closely related type strains, respectively, while strain 9PBR-1T shared corresponding values of 80.3–83.2 % and 23.6–26.7 % with its closely related type strains, respectively. The two novel strains could be clearly distinguished from their closely related type strains by enzyme activities and substrates assimilation, respectively. Both of them took iso-C15:0, summed feature 3 (C16:1 ω7c and/or C16:1 ω6c), summed feature 4 (iso-C17:1 I and/or anteiso-C17:1 B) and C16:1 ω5c as major fatty acids, and showed clear differences from their closely relatives in the contents of several components. They contained menaquinone 7 as the major respiratory quinone and phosphatidylethanolamine as the dominant polar lipid. The G+C contents of strains 92R-1T and 9PBR-1T were 56.7 and 59.5 mol%, respectively. The results clearly supported that strains 92R-1T and 9PBR-1T represent two distinct novel species within the genus Hymenobacter , for which the names Hymenobacter fodinae sp. nov. (type strain 92R-1T=GDMCC 1.1493T=JCM 32697T) and Hymenobacter metallicola sp. nov. (type strain 9PBR-1T=GDMCC 1.1491T=JCM 32698T) are proposed.


2010 ◽  
Vol 60 (5) ◽  
pp. 1224-1235 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marek Eliáš ◽  
Yvonne Němcová ◽  
Pavel Škaloud ◽  
Jiří Neustupa ◽  
Veronika Kaufnerová ◽  
...  

The algal flora of subaerial habitats in the tropics remains largely unexplored, despite the fact that it potentially encompasses a wealth of new evolutionary diversity. Here we present a detailed morphological and molecular characterization of an autosporic coccoid green alga isolated from decaying wood in a natural forest in Singapore. Depending on culture conditions, this alga formed globular to irregularly oval solitary cells. Autosporulation was the only mode of reproduction observed. The cell periphery was filled with numerous vacuoles, and a single parietal chloroplast contained a conspicuous pyrenoid surrounded by a bipartite starch envelope. The cell wall was composed of a thick inner layer and a thin trilaminar outer layer, and the cell surface was ornamented with a few delicate ribs. Phylogenetic analyses of 18S rRNA gene sequences placed our strain in the family Scenedesmaceae (Sphaeropleales, Chlorophyceae) as a strongly supported sister branch of the genus Desmodesmus. Analyses of an alternative phylogenetic marker widely used for the Scenedesmaceae, the ITS2 region, confirmed that the strain is distinct from any scenedesmacean alga sequenced to date, but is related to the genus Desmodesmus, despite lacking the defining phenotypic features of Desmodesmus (cell wall with four sporopolleninic layers ornamented with peculiar submicroscopic structures). Collectively, our results establish that we identified a novel, previously undocumented, evolutionary lineage of scenedesmacean algae necessitating its description as a new species in a new genus. We propose it be named Hylodesmus singaporensis gen. et sp. nov. A cryopreserved holotype specimen has been deposited into the Culture Collection of Algae of Charles University in Prague, Czech Republic (CAUP) as CAUP C-H8001.


2013 ◽  
Vol 63 (Pt_3) ◽  
pp. 1155-1164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xumiao Chen ◽  
Miao Miao ◽  
Honggang Ma ◽  
Chen Shao ◽  
Khaled A. S. Al-Rasheid

A novel stichotrich ciliate, Strongylidium orientale sp. nov., was discovered from a mangrove river in Hong Kong, southern China, and its morphology was investigated through observations in vivo and after protargol impregnation. Cells are 80–120×35–50 µm in vivo and fusiform in shape, with rounded anterior and tapered posterior ends. It is characterized by its brackish habitat and by the presence of two types of cortical granules arranged irregularly throughout the cortex. Morphogenetic events of cell division and physiological reorganization are described. The main ontogenetic features were: (i) only the posterior portion of the parental adoral zone of membranelles was renewed by dedifferentiation of the old structures; (ii) the oral primordium in the opisthe occurred apokinetally; (iii) the left and right ventral rows originated intrakinetally and the final left ventral row was spliced from two cirri from the frontoventral cirral anlage, a short cirral row from the anlage for the right ventral row and a long cirral row which was formed from the whole anlage of the left ventral row; (iv) the marginal rows developed intrakinetally; (v) the dorsal kineties replicated entirely de novo and did not fragment; and (vi) the two macronuclear nodules fused into a mass and then divided. Based on small-subunit rRNA gene sequences, phylogenetic analyses showed a close relationship with its congener Strongylidium pseudocrassum and with the genus Pseudouroleptus.


2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (12) ◽  
pp. 6390-6395 ◽  
Author(s):  
Han Xue ◽  
Chun-gen Piao ◽  
Ying-hua Lin ◽  
Dan-ran Bian ◽  
Yong Li

A Gram-stain-negative, strictly aerobic, non-spore-forming, rod-shaped, motile with polar flagella and pale-orange bacterium, designated strain 122213-3T, was isolated from air, collected at the foot of the Xiangshan Mountain, located in Beijing, PR China. Optimal growth occurred at 28 °C, at pH 7 and in the presence of 0–1 % (w/v) NaCl. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA gene sequences revealed that 122213-3T clustered with species of the genus Noviherbaspirillum and formed a distinct sublineage, showing highest similarities to Noviherbaspirillum malthae CC-AFH3T (96.88 %), Noviherbaspirillum massiliense JC206T (95.78 %) and Noviherbaspirillum aurantiacum SUEMI08T (95.78 %). The predominant cellular fatty acids were summed feature 3 (C16 : 1  ω6c and/or C16 : 1  ω7c), summed feature 8 (C18 : 1  ω7c and/or C18 : 1  ω6c) and C16 : 0. The predominant quinone was ubiquinone 8 (Q-8). The polar lipids comprised phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylglycerol, unidentified phospholipid and two unidentified polar lipids. The polyamine pattern showed the presence of putrescine as the major polyamine, with minor amounts of 2-hydroxyputrescine. The DNA G+C content was 60.1 mol%. The phylogenetic analysis and physiological and biochemical data showed that strain 122213-3T should be classified as representing a novel species in the genus Noviherbaspirillum , for which the name Noviherbaspirillum aerium sp. nov. is proposed. The type strain of N. aerium is 122213-3T (=CFCC 14286T=LMG 30131T).


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anna Maria Fiore-Donno ◽  
Akiko Kamono ◽  
Ema E. Chao ◽  
Manabu Fukui ◽  
Thomas Cavalier-Smith

The genus Hyperamoeba Alexeieff, 1923 was established to accommodate an aerobic amoeba exhibiting three life stages—amoeba, flagellate, and cyst. As more species/strains were isolated, it became increasingly evident from small subunit (SSU) gene phylogenies and ultrastructure that Hyperamoeba is polyphyletic and its species occupy different positions within the class Myxogastria. To pinpoint Hyperamoeba strains within other myxogastrid genera we aligned numerous myxogastrid sequences: whole small subunit ribosomal (SSU or 18S rRNA) gene for 50 dark-spored (i.e. Stemonitida and Physarida) Myxogastria (including a new ‘‘Hyperamoeba’’/Didymium sequence) and a ca. 400-bp SSU fragment for 147 isolates assigned to 10 genera of the order Physarida. Phylogenetic analyses show unambiguously that the type species Hyperamoeba flagellata is a Physarum (Physarum flagellatum comb. nov.) as it nests among other Physarum species as robust sister to Physarum didermoides. Our trees also allow the following allocations: five Hyperamoeba strains to the genus Stemonitis; Hyperamoeba dachnaya, Pseudodidymium cryptomastigophorum, and three other Hyperamoeba strains to the genus Didymium; and two further Hyperamoeba strains to the family Physaridae. We therefore abandon the polyphyletic and redundant genus Hyperamoeba. We discuss the implications for the ecology and evolution of Myxogastria, whose amoeboflagellates are more widespread than previous inventories supposed, being now found in freshwater and even marine environments.


2020 ◽  
Vol 70 (4) ◽  
pp. 2867-2872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guang-Da Feng ◽  
Wendi Chen ◽  
Xian-Jiao Zhang ◽  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Sheng-Nan Wang ◽  
...  

A novel pink-pigmented strain, designated 6HR-1T, was isolated from tungsten mine tailings in Jiangxi Province, PR China. Cells were Gram-stain-negative, aerobic, non-spore-forming, rod-shaped and motile with a polar flagellum (monotrichous). It could not utilize methanol, methylamine, formaldehyde or formate as a sole carbon source. The methanol dehydrogenase mxaF gene was absent but the xoxF gene was present. Phylogenomic and 16S rRNA gene phylogenetic analyses clearly showed that strain 6HR-1T was affiliated to the genus Methylobacterium and closely related to ‘Methylobacterium terrae’ 17Sr1-28T (98.6 %), Methylobacterium platani JCM 14648T (97.7 %), Methylobacterium variabile DSM 16961T (97.7 %) and Methylobacterium currus KACC 19662T (97.4 %). The average nucleotide identity and digital DNA–DNA hybridization values between strain 6HR-1T and its closely related type species were 87.4–88.7 and 33.2–36.3 %, respectively. It had summed feature 8 (C18 : 1 ω7c and/or C18 : 1 ω6c) as the major fatty acid and ubiquinone 10 as the predominant respiratory quinone. Polyphasic characterization supported that strain 6HR-1T represents a novel species of the genus Methylobacterium , for which the name Methylobacterium nonmethylotrophicum sp. nov. is proposed with the type strain 6HR-1T (=GDMCC 1.662T=KCTC 42760T).


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