Comamonadaceae
Betaproteobacteria
RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
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Molecular Sequence Data
Descriptions of specific amino acid, carbohydrate, or nucleotide sequences which have appeared in the published literature and/or are deposited in and maintained by databanks such as GENBANK, European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL), National Biomedical Research Foundation (NBRF), or other sequence repositories.
Rhodospirillaceae
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Rhodopseudomonas
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Processes by which phototrophic organisms use sunlight as their primary energy source. Contrasts with chemotrophic processes which do not depend on light and function in deriving energy from exogenous chemical sources. Photoautotrophy (or photolithotrophy) is the ability to use sunlight as energy to fix inorganic nutrients to be used for other organic requirements. Photoautotrophs include all GREEN PLANTS; GREEN ALGAE; CYANOBACTERIA; and green and PURPLE SULFUR BACTERIA. Photoheterotrophs or photoorganotrophs require a supply of organic nutrients for their organic requirements but use sunlight as their primary energy source; examples include certain PURPLE NONSULFUR BACTERIA. Depending on environmental conditions some organisms can switch between different nutritional modes (AUTOTROPHY; HETEROTROPHY; chemotrophy; or phototrophy) to utilize different sources to meet their nutrients and energy requirements.
Carotenoids
Ochromonas
Rhodospirillum
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Identification and measurement of ELEMENTS and their location based on the fact that X-RAYS emitted by an element excited by an electron beam have a wavelength characteristic of that element and an intensity related to its concentration. It is performed with an electron microscope fitted with an x-ray spectrometer, in scanning or transmission mode.
Metals, Heavy
Methylococcaceae
Delftia acidovorans
Sodium-Hydrogen Antiporter
Delftia
Avastrovirus
2,4-Dichlorophenoxyacetic Acid
Sodium
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Western Australia
A state in western Australia. Its capital is Perth. It was first visited by the Dutch in 1616 but the English took possession in 1791 and permanent colonization began in 1829. It was a penal settlement 1850-1888, became part of the colonial government in 1886, and was granted self government in 1890. (From Webster's New Geographical Dictionary, 1988, p1329)
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Santalaceae
Commitment of Mentally Ill
Electricity generation by direct oxidation of glucose in mediatorless microbial fuel cells. (1/138)
Abundant energy, stored primarily in the form of carbohydrates, can be found in waste biomass from agricultural, municipal and industrial sources as well as in dedicated energy crops, such as corn and other grains. Potential strategies for deriving useful forms of energy from carbohydrates include production of ethanol and conversion to hydrogen, but these approaches face technical and economic hurdles. An alternative strategy is direct conversion of sugars to electrical power. Existing transition metal-catalyzed fuel cells cannot be used to generate electric power from carbohydrates. Alternatively, biofuel cells in which whole cells or isolated redox enzymes catalyze the oxidation of the sugar have been developed, but their applicability has been limited by several factors, including (i) the need to add electron-shuttling compounds that mediate electron transfer from the cell to the anode, (ii) incomplete oxidation of the sugars and (iii) lack of long-term stability of the fuel cells. Here we report on a novel microorganism, Rhodoferax ferrireducens, that can oxidize glucose to CO(2) and quantitatively transfer electrons to graphite electrodes without the need for an electron-shuttling mediator. Growth is supported by energy derived from the electron transfer process itself and results in stable, long-term power production. (+info)Caenibacterium thermophilum gen. nov., sp. nov., isolated from a thermophilic aerobic digester of municipal sludge. (2/138)
A bacterial strain, N2-680(T) (=DSM 15264(T)=LMG 21760(T)), isolated from a thermophilic aerobic digester of municipal sludge, was characterized with respect to its morphology, physiology and taxonomy. Phenotypically, the isolate was a Gram-negative rod with a polar flagellum, catalase- and oxidase-positive, containing cytoplasmic inclusions of poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate and had an optimal growth temperature of about 47 degrees C. Strain N2-680(T) was unable to reduce nitrate and could use organic acids, amino acids and carbohydrates as single carbon sources. Chemotaxonomic analysis revealed that ubiquinone 8 was the major respiratory quinone of this organism and that phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylglycerol were the major polar lipids. At 50 degrees C, the major components in fatty acid methyl ester analysis were C(16 : 0) and cyclo-C(17 : 0). The highest 16S rDNA sequence identity of isolate N2-680(T) was to Leptothrix mobilis and Ideonella dechloratans (95.7 %) and to Rubrivivax gelatinosus and Aquabacterium commune (95.6 %). 16S rDNA sequence similarities to species of two related thermophilic genera, Caldimonas manganoxidans and Tepidimonas ignava, were lower (93.6 and 94.7 %). On the basis of phylogenetic analyses and physiological and chemotaxonomic characteristics, it is proposed that isolate N2-680(T) represents a new genus and species, for which the name Caenibacterium thermophilum gen. nov., sp. nov. is proposed. (+info)QUANTITATIVE STUDIES OF THE EFFECT OF ORGANIC SUBSTRATES AND 2,4-DINITROPHENOL ON HETEROTROPHIC CARBON DIOXIDE FIXATION IN HYDROGENOMONAS FACILIS. (3/138)
McFadden, Bruce A. (Washington State University, Pullman), and H. Robert Homann. Quantitative studies of the effect of organic substrates and 2,4-dinitrophenol on heterotrophic carbon dioxide fixation in Hydrogenomonas facilis. J. Bacteriol. 86:971-977. 1963.-Whole cells of Hydrogenomonas facilis under heterotrophic conditions fixed levels of C(14)O(2) which depended upon the nature of the carbon source being oxidized. It was established that oxidative rates varied as a function of p(CO2). Therefore, all studies were conducted in the presence of 1.5 mole% CO(2) in the gas phase. With glucose-grown cells supplied with glucose as substrate, the heterotrophic fixation was curtailed 98% by the addition of 8.3 x 10(-4)m 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP). A coupling between reductive fixation of CO(2) and heterotrophic oxidation of substrate is consistent with the observed effect of DNP. The efficiency of coupling of fixation with oxidation was studied for acetate, d-glucose, l-glutamate, d,l-lactate, d-ribose, and succinate as substrates. Kinetic studies showed that the efficiency of coupling (expressed as disintegrations per minute of C(14) per microliter of O(2)) was initially time-variable for all substrates; however, it approached a constant value after 30 to 45 min for acetate, glutamate, lactate, and succinate. The initial variation of the ratio with time was due primarily to C(14)O(2) uptake, which was nonlinear with time. Control studies in the absence of exogenous substrate indicated that CO(2) fixation may also be linked to oxidation of endogenous stores accumulated during heterotrophic growth. d-Ribose appears to be the most promising substrate for short-term fixation studies owing to the rapid incorporation of C(14) and the unusually low endogenous fixation rate by cells grown on ribose. Calculations reveal that, after isotopic equilibrium has occurred, the amount of CO(2) utilized during glucose oxidation is almost 50% of O(2) uptake during the same interval. Even during succinate oxidation, which was shown to be coupled much less effectively with CO(2) fixation, the CO(2) utilized during the same interval is 8% of O(2) uptake. (+info)UTILIZATION OF AROMATIC AMINO ACIDS BY HYDROGENOMONAS FACILIS. (4/138)
DeCicco, B. T. (Rutgers, The State University, New Brunswick, N.J.), and W. W. Umbreit. Utilization of aromatic amino acids by Hydrogenomonas facilis. J. Bacteriol. 88:1590-1594. 1964.-An auxotrophic mutant of Hydrogenomonas facilis was isolated which requires tryptophan, phenylalanine, and p-aminobenzoic acid (PABA) for growth. With glucose as the main carbon and energy source, the quantitative requirements for tryptophan and PABA were at normal microgram levels, but the requirement for phenylalanine was very large and approached substrate concentrations. The large phenylalanine requirement is due to a rapid oxidation and degradation of phenylalanine by the mutant. The utilization of both phenylalanine and glucose is adaptive, and the presence of phenylalanine partially inhibits the induction of the glucose-utilizing system. Wild-type H. facilis can utilize either phenylalanine or tyrosine for growth. Tracer studies indicated that during growth on phenylalanine, the aromatic ring is opened and degraded. Wild-type cells grown on either phenylalanine or tyrosine can oxidize phenylalanine, tyrosine, or phenylpyruvate without a lag. Another inducible pathway enables H. facilis to utilize either quinate or 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate for growth, and sequential adaptation studies revealed that quinate is converted to 3,4-dihydroxybenzoate during its degradation. Mutants may be obtained which can also utilize 2,5-dihydroxybenzoate for growth. (+info)CHARACTERIZATION OF POLY-BETA-HYDROXYBUTYRATE EXTRACTED FROM DIFFERENT BACTERIA. (5/138)
Lundgren, D. G. (Syracuse University, Syracuse, N.Y.), R. Alper, C. Schnaitman and R. H. Marchessault. Characterization of poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate extracted from different bacteria. J. Bacteriol. 89:245-251. 1965.-Poly-beta-hydroxybutyrate (PHB) from different bacterial genera was studied with regard to its crystal structure, infrared absorption, intrinsic viscosity, and electron microscopy. All PHB samples precipitated from dilute chloroform solution gave identical X-ray diffractograms confirming uniformity of crystal structure, and uniformity of molecular structure, based on the similarity of the recorded infrared spectra, was also established. Crystal morphology was also similar, showing the reported "lath" shape structure for purified polymer from Bacillus cereus. Intrinsic viscosity ranged from 0.04 to 11.5 depending upon the polymer treatment; polymer molecular weights, based upon viscometry, could be estimated to range from 1,000 to 250,000. It is concluded that the same basic molecule is involved in all PHB present in the bacterial kindgom. (+info)CHARACTERISTICS AND INTERMEDIATES OF SHORT-TERM C-14-O-2 INCORPORATION DURING RIBOSE OXIDATION BY HYDROGENOMONAS FACILIS. (6/138)
McFadden, B. A. (Washington State University, Pullman), and H. R. Homann. Characteristics and intermediates of short-term C(14)O(2) incorporation during ribose oxidation by Hydrogenomonas facilis. J. Bacteriol. 89:839-847. 1965.-Ribose-grown cells of Hydrogenomonas facilis, which had been suspended in growth medium and were oxidizing ribose, were exposed to HC(14)O(3) (-) of high specific activity. The uptake was proportional to cell mass. Short-term uptake (less than 2 min) was completely inhibited by 10(-3)m 2,4-dinitrophenol (DNP) or by <4 x 10(-6)mm-chlorocarbonyl cyanide phenylhydrazone, and to the extent of 42% by 5 x 10(-5)m DNP. The following observations were made in kinetic studies (8, 16, 35, 67, 96, and 181 sec) of fixation in the presence of ribose. Glutamate was extensively labeled in periods up to 3 min. It was one of the major early products, containing 30% of the label at 8 sec. The sugar phosphate fraction was not detectably labeled at 8 or 16 sec, but its C(14)-content increased rapidly to 27% at 35 sec and then slowly decreased. Label in phosphoglycerate, phosphoenolpyruvate, and alanine did not appear until 35 sec, and did not exceed about 7, 2, and 3%, respectively, of the total extracted radioactivity. Adenosine triphosphate and adenosine diphosphate were heavily labeled after fixation in a pilot study for 125 sec. Although considerable radioactivity incorporated during the pilot study was intractable by the extraction procedure employed, virtually no C(14) was found in the residue in poly-beta-hydroxybutyric acid. A large number of amino acids and organic acids and some organic phosphates were not detectably labeled in any of the experiments. Omission of ribose greatly diminished incorporation, particularly into glutamate. (+info)NICKEL-DEPENDENT CHEMOLITHOTROPHIC GROWTH OF TWO HYDROGENOMONAS STRAINS. (7/138)
Bartha, R. (University of Washington, Seattle), and E. J. Ordal. Nickel-dependent chemolithotrophic growth of two Hydrogenomonas strains. J. Bacteriol. 89:1015-1019. 1965.-The trace element requirements for growth of facultative chemolithotrophic Hydrogenomonas strains H1 and H16 were investigated under both autotrophic and heterotrophic conditions. The organisms were grown in a mineral medium, rendered deficient in trace elements by extraction with 8-hydroxyquinoline and chloroform, and, in some cases, by coprecipitation with copper. The organic substrates, succinate and fumarate, used for heterotrophic growth were treated in a similar fashion. Acetate and butyrate were purified by redistillation. It was found that iron alone was required for heterotrophic growth (optimal concentration, 1.5 x 10(-6)m Fe(+++)), but cells grown chemolithotrophically on molecular hydrogen required the addition of nickel. The yield of protein was proportional to the nickel added, reaching a maximum at 3 x 10(-7)m Ni(++). Manganese, cobalt, copper, and zinc, alone or in combination, failed to substitute for nickel in the experiments with Hydrogenomonas. Although nickel is required specifically for the chemolithotrophic growth of Hydrogenomonas, nickel deficiency did not affect: (i) the synthesis or activation of hydrogenase, (ii) the Knallgas reaction, (iii) the assimilation of CO(2) by resting cells, or the synthesis of the storage material poly-beta-hydroxybutyric acid. It is suggested that nickel participates in some reaction involved in CO(2) fixation by growing cells. (+info)Nutritional requirements for Hydrogenomonas eutropha. (8/138)
Repaske, Roy (National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Bethesda, Md.). Nutritional requirements for Hydrogenomonas eutropha. J. Bacteriol. 83: 418-422. 1962.-A simple apparatus for the autotrophic cultivation of Hydrogenomonas eutropha in 100-ml shake cultures is described. Nitrogen, in the form of ammonium, nitrate, or urea, was used for growth; nitrite could not be utilized. Optimal growth occurred at pH 6.4 to 6.8 at 30 C. H. eutropha grew best in an atmosphere containing 15 to 25% oxygen and 10% carbon dioxide. Below these concentrations each of the gases was limiting. Growth was shown to be dependent on iron, and the rate of growth was a function of iron concentration and its state of oxidation. (+info)
Acidovorax citrulli (strain AAC00-1) (Acidovorax avenae subsp. citrulli)
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Ramlibacter tataouinensis NEUF2011 - microbewiki
Ramlibacter tataouinensis NEUF2011 - microbewiki
Varpa 3273 - Type VI secretion lipoprotein, VC A0113 family - Variovorax paradoxus (strain EPS) - Varpa 3273 gene & protein
Bacterial fruit blotch of cucurbits
Three types of taxis used in the response of Acidovorax sp. strain JS42 to 2-nitrotoluene. - PubMed - NCBI
D-lactate catabolism in Acidovorax sp. GW101-3H11
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Identification of the bphA and bphB Genes of Pseudomonas sp. Strain KKS102 Involved in degradation of biphenyl and...
Acidovorax bacteria, SEM - Stock Image C006/3009 - Science Photo Library
Acidovorax bacteria, SEM - Stock Image C006/3091 - Science Photo Library
UniProt: A1WDT7 VEREI
Ramlibacter sp. T-55 | Semantic Scholar
KEGG PATHWAY: Glycolysis / Gluconeogenesis - Variovorax paradoxus EPS
Ramlibacter solisilvae sp. nov., isolated from forest soil, and emended description of the genus Ramlibacter. - PubMed - NCBI
Genus: Hydrogenophaga
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Albidiferax ferrireducens corrig. (Finneran et al.) Ramana and Sasikal
Albidiferax ferrireducens corrig. (Finneran et al.) Ramana and Sasikal
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Purple bacteria
Rhodocyclus Comamonadaceae, e.g. Rhodoferax Purple sulfur bacteria are included in the gamma subgroup. Gammaproteobacteria is ...
Acidovorax delafieldii
It belongs to Comamonadaceae. George M. Garrity; Don J. Brenner; Noel R. Krieg; James T. Staley (July 26, 2005) [1984(Williams ...
Delftia lacustris
... is a Gram-negative, nonfermentative, motile, rod-shaped bacterium from the Comamonadaceae family, which was ...
Acidovorax anthurii
This species belongs to Comamonadaceae. L. Gardan; C. Dauga; P. Prior; M. Gillis; G. S. Saddler (2000). "Acidovorax anthurii sp ...
Ideonella
... is a genus of Comamonadaceae bacteria. In 2016 I. sakaiensis was shown to degrade PET, a polymer widely used in food ...
Extensimonas
... is a Gram-negative, neutrophilic and non-spore-forming genus of bacteria from the family of Comamonadaceae with ... nov., a member of the family Comamonadaceae". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 63 (Pt 6): ...
Caenimonas
... is a genus from the family of Comamonadaceae. Parte, A.C. "Caenimonas". LPSN. Parker, Charles Thomas; Wigley, Sarah ...
Hydrogenophaga pseudoflava
... is a bacterium from the Comamonadaceae family. "Archived copy". Retrieved 2013-05-11. "Taxonomy ...
Xenophilus (bacteria)
Xenophilus is a genus of bacteria from the family Comamonadaceae. Parte, A.C. "Xenophilus". LPSN. "Xenophilus". www.uniprot.org ...
Roseateles
... is a genus of bacteria from the family Comamonadaceae. J.P. Euzeby (1998-01-01). "Roseateles". LPSN. Retrieved 2013- ...
Caldimonas
... is a genus of bacteria from the family of Comamonadaceae. Parte, A.C. "Caldimonas". LPSN. "Caldimonas hydrothermale ...
Ottowia
... is a genus of bacteria from the family of Comamonadaceae. Parte, A.C. "Ottowia". LPSN. Geng, S; Pan, XC; Mei, R; Wang, ...
Delftia deserti
D. deserti is of the Betaproteobacteria lineage within the Comamonadaceae family. Delftia deserti cells are short rods and ...
Hydrogenophaga taeniospiralis
... is a catalase-negative bacterium from the Comamonadaceae family. LPSN http://www.nbrc.nite.go.jp/ ...
Giesbergeria
... is a genus of bacteria from the family of Comamonadaceae. Giesbergeria is named after the Dutch microbiologist G. ...
Diaphorobacter
... is a genus of bacteria from the family of Comamonadaceae. Parte, A.C. "Diaphorobacter". LPSN. "Diaphorobacter ...
Leptothrix lopholea
... is a bacterium from the genus Leptothrix and family Comamonadaceae. J.P. Euzeby. "Leptothrix". LPSN. ...
Polaromonas
... is a genus of Gram-negative bacteria from the family Comamonadaceae. Polaromonas species are psychrophiles. Irgens ...
Acidovorax wohlfahrtii
... is a bacterium from the genus Acidovorax and the family Comamonadaceae. http://www.straininfo.net/ ...
Delftia acidovorans
It was renamed due to rRNA relatedness and differences from other microbes within the Comamonadaceae family. These differences ... Delftia acidovorans exists as part of the Betaproteobacteria lineage within the Comamonadaceae family. D. acidovorans strains ... "Phylogenetic relationships among members of the Comamonadaceae, and description of Delftia acidovorans (den Dooren de Jong 1926 ...
Hydrogenophaga intermedia
... is a Gram-negative, oxidase-positive bacterium from the Comamonadaceae family. It has the ability to ...
Aquabacterium hongkongensis
... is a bacterium of the genus Aquabacterium, in the family Comamonadaceae. LPSN http://eol.org/pages/ ...
Ideonella dechloratans
... is a chlorate-respiring bacterium from the genus Ideonella and family Comamonadaceae. "Archived copy". ...
Macromonas bipunctata
Malikia nests within the family Comamonadaceae in the phylum Proteobacteria and is also aerobic. Malikia granosa has a 96.5% ...
Acidovorax cattleyae
... is a bacterium from the family Comamonadaceae which causes brown spots on orchids. LPSN http://www. ...
Acidovorax aerodenitrificans
... is a bacterium from the genus of Acidovorax and the family of Comamonadaceae. https://www.uniprot. ...
Rhodoferax
2009). "Albidoferax, a new genus of Comamonadaceae and reclassification of Rhodoferax ferrireducens (Finneran et al. 2003) as ... nov., a psychrotolerant, very slowly growing bacterium within the family Comamonadaceae, proposal of appropriate taxonomic ...
Thiomonas
... is a genus of Gram-negative, non-spore-forming bacteria from the family of Comamonadaceae. LPSN LPSN http://ijs. ...
Acidovorax oryzae
... is a bacterium from the Comamonadaceae family which is closely related to Acidovorax citrulli. Acidovorax ...
Comamonadaceae data
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Encyclopedia of Life
Comamonadaceae - Wikipedia
The Comamonadaceae are a family of the Betaproteobacteria. Like all Proteobacteria, they are Gram-negative. They are aerobic ... Comamonadaceae, a New Family Encompassing the Acidovorans rRNA Complex, Including Variovorax paradoxus gen. nov.,comb. nov. for ... ISBN 978-0-387-24145-6. Comamonadaceae J.P. Euzéby: List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature v t e. ... "List of genera included in families - Comamonadaceae". List of Prokaryotic Names with Standing in Nomenclature. Retrieved 26 ...
FadP: Comamonadaceae
Rhodoferax saidenbachensis sp. nov., a psychrotolerant, very slowly growing bacterium within the family Comamonadaceae,...
... the bacterium belongs to the genus Rhodoferax within the family Comamonadaceae . The new taxon differed from related species ... Willems A. , De Ley J. , Gillis M. , Kersters K. . ( 1991; ). Comamonadaceae, a new family encompassing the acidovorans rRNA ... Ramana C. V. , Sasikala C. . ( 2009; ). Albidoferax, a new genus of Comamonadaceae and reclassification of Rhodoferax ... nov., a psychrotolerant, very slowly growing bacterium within the family Comamonadaceae, proposal of appropriate taxonomic ...
Delftia lacustris - Wikipedia
Shifts in the Skin-Associated Microbiota of Hatchery-Reared Common Snook Centropomus undecimalis During Acclimation to the Wild...
Purple bacteria - Wikipedia
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HOGENOM: POLNA 4 PE109
HOGENOM: POLNA 9 PE2311
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Comamonadaceae; H, Rhodocyclaceae; I, Methylophilaceae; J, Hydrogenophilaceae; K, Methylococcaceae; L, Helicobacteraceae; M, ... Comamonadaceae, Rhodocylaceae, Cytophagaceae, Methylococcaceae, Myxococcaceae, Burkholderiaceae, and Flavobacteriaceae (Figure ... of all reads annotated to subsystems in KOW and ZS and was mainly assigned to Comamonadaceae, Hydrogenophilaceae, ... arsenic resistance genes were assigned mainly to Comamonadaceae, Rhodocylaceae, Rhodospirillaceae, Burkholderiaceae, ...
ureG - Urease accessory protein UreG - Polaromonas naphthalenivorans (strain CJ2) - ureG gene & protein
Daci 0719 - Sodium/hydrogen exchanger - Delftia acidovorans (strain DSM 14801 / SPH-1) - Daci 0719 gene & protein
The dynamic genome of Hydra
KEGG GENOME: Polaromonas naphthalenivorans
UniProt/TrEMBL: A0A0P0M7A1 9BURK
The dynamic genome of Hydra | Nature
genes have an orthologue in another species of Comamonadaceae (Supplementary Table 13). Notably, the Curvibacter sp. genome ... indicate that this bacterium is a novel Curvibacter species belonging to the family Comamonadaceae (order Burkholderiales)11. ... encodes nine different ABC sugar transporters, compared to only one or two in other species of Comamonadaceae (Supplementary ...
Difference between revisions of "Ramlibacter tataouinensis NEUF2011" - microbewiki
Ramlibacter tataouinensis NEUF2011 - microbewiki
Consequences of increased terrestrial dissolved organic matter and temperature on bacterioplankton community composition during...
2; Table 1). Interestingly, we note that only one OTU in the whole experiment (UMU_000011) (Comamonadaceae) was absent in the ... Most Comamonadaceae (Betaproteobacteria) were abundant in the tDOMH + T mesocosms on day 14, but then decreased substantially ... Betaproteobacterial OTUs like Burkholderia and Comamonadaceae were positively influenced by increased tDOM and temperature (Fig ... such as Comamonadaceae (Betaproteobacteria) and Desulfuromonadales (Deltaprotebacteria) OTUs, increased substantially in tDOMH ...
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Proteobacteria2
- Results of the WGS and 16S analyses were highly consistent and indicated that more than half of the bacterial sequences were Proteobacteria , predominantly Comamonadaceae . (osti.gov)
- oral taxon 025 Phylotype AF385528 11 0.03 267 Oral Clone AV011a 0 11 0 N/A 026 Bacteria Proteobacteria Betaproteobacteria Burkholderiales Comamonadaceae Schlegelella aquatica Named LMG 23380 AF385538 9 0.03 294 Oral Clone CA004 0 9 0 N/A 027 Bacteria Proteobacteria Betaproteobacteria Burkholderiales Burkholderiaceae Cupriavidus gilardii Unnamed AY005039 0 0.00 0 Strain TFI C37KA 0 0 0 N/A 028 Bacteria Proteobacteria Betaproteobacteria Rhodocyclales Rhodocyclaceae Rhodocyclus sp. (homd.org)
Betaproteobacteria2
- The Comamonadaceae are a family of the Betaproteobacteria. (wikipedia.org)
- Of those, most sequences were assigned to different genera of the Betaproteobacteria family Comamonadaceae. (uzh.ch)
Delftia3
- Delftia lacustris is a Gram-negative , nonfermentative, motile, rod-shaped bacterium from the Comamonadaceae family, which was isolated from mesotrophic lake water in Denmark . (wikipedia.org)
- Delftia tsuruhatensis, a member of the Comamonadaceae family, was first isolated from sludge in Japan in 2003 ( 1 ). (cdc.gov)
- Phylogenetic relationships among members of the Comamonadaceae, and description of Delftia acidovorans (den Dooren de Jong 1926 and Tamaoka et al. (semanticscholar.org)
Genus1
- Ramana CV, Sasikala C. Albidoferax, a new genus of Comamonadaceae and reclassification of Rhodoferax ferrireducens (Finneran et al. (atcc.org)
Polaromonas1
- Members of the betaproteobacterial genera Curvibacter , Aquabacterium , and Polaromonas ( Comamonadaceae ) grew in most waters and represent ubiquitous, mesophilic, heterotrophic aerobes in bottled waters. (biomedcentral.com)
Family4
- Comamonadaceae, a New Family Encompassing the Acidovorans rRNA Complex, Including Variovorax paradoxus gen. nov.,comb. (wikipedia.org)
- The reconstructed regulons for a novel GntR family transcription factor, GguR, include the majority of hexuronate/aldarate utilization genes in 47 species from the Burkholderiaceae , Comamonadaceae , Halomonadaceae , and Pseudomonadaceae families. (asm.org)
- Consortium was prepared from Bacillus cereus (Acc KF859972), Bacillus altitudinis(Acc KF859970), commomonas (Acc KF859971) belonging to family Comamonadaceae and Stenotrophomonas maltophilia (Acc KF859973). (thefreedictionary.com)
- Decrease of Moraxellaceae, Flavobacteriaceae, Comamonadaceae, Methylobacteriaceae family bacteria and increase of Erysipelotrichaceae family and unclassified Clostridiales order families was noted in the stomach. (gastroscan.ru)
Flavobacteriaceae1
- Bacterial families which were present in two tissues with biofilms were Alteromonadaceae, Propionibacteriaceae, Streptomycetaceae, Streptococcaceae , Enterobacteriaceae, Comamonadaceae, and Flavobacteriaceae and may thus be interesting candidates for further analysis as initiators of chronic wound infection in dogs. (thefreedictionary.com)
Families1
- It is difficult to assign this association to a particular group of germs, (about 100 families were analysed and identified, including Comamonadaceae, Sphingomonadaceae, Oxalobacteraceae and other taxons). (eaaci.org)