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Genome analysis of Desulfotomaculum gibsoniae strain GrollT a highly versatile Gram-positive sulfate-reducing bacterium
Authors:Jan Kuever  Michael Visser  Claudia Loeffler  Matthias Boll  Petra Worm  Diana Z. Sousa  Caroline M. Plugge  Peter J. Schaap  Gerard Muyzer  Ines A.C. Pereira  Sofiya N. Parshina  Lynne A. Goodwin  Nikos C. Kyrpides  Janine Detter  Tanja Woyke  Patrick Chain  Karen W. Davenport  Manfred Rohde  Stefan Spring  Hans-Peter Klenk  Alfons J.M. Stams
Abstract:Desulfotomaculum gibsoniae is a mesophilic member of the polyphyletic spore-forming genus Desulfotomaculum within the family Peptococcaceae. This bacterium was isolated from a freshwater ditch and is of interest because it can grow with a large variety of organic substrates, in particular several aromatic compounds, short-chain and medium-chain fatty acids, which are degraded completely to carbon dioxide coupled to the reduction of sulfate. It can grow autotrophically with H2 + CO2 and sulfate and slowly acetogenically with H2 + CO2, formate or methoxylated aromatic compounds in the absence of sulfate. It does not require any vitamins for growth. Here, we describe the features of D. gibsoniae strain GrollT together with the genome sequence and annotation. The chromosome has 4,855,529 bp organized in one circular contig and is the largest genome of all sequenced Desulfotomaculum spp. to date. A total of 4,666 candidate protein-encoding genes and 96 RNA genes were identified. Genes of the acetyl-CoA pathway, possibly involved in heterotrophic growth and in CO2 fixation during autotrophic growth, are present. The genome contains a large set of genes for the anaerobic transformation and degradation of aromatic compounds, which are lacking in the other sequenced Desulfotomaculum genomes.
Keywords:spore-forming anaerobes   sulfate reduction   autotrophic   anaerobic degradation of aromatic compounds   complete oxidizer   Peptococcaceae   Clostridiales
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