Abstract

The genera Halosiccatus and Halomicrobium are the most closely related genera within the family Haloarculaceae (class Halobacteria). All species of these two genera are closely related to each other in phylogenetic analyses based on their 16S rRNA gene sequences, and also using the sequences of four housekeeping genes. The genus Halosiccatus was proposed based on inferred phylogeny using only one of the three distinct 16S rRNA genes detected in strain DC8T, while Halomicrobium zhouii, one of three species of Halomicrobium, was omitted from the reference species used in these analyses. The related 16S rRNA gene sequence similarities of type strains of Halomicrobium katesii and Halomicrobium mukohataei were as high as 99.5%–99.7%, much higher than the threshold values proposed as species boundaries. These issues could have resulted in taxonomic inaccuracies in the genera Halosiccatus and Halomicrobium, and a thorough study was undertaken to clarify the status of all species in both genera. Based on phylogenetic and phylogenomic analyses, the current four species of the two genera form a single clade with high bootstrap confidence, indicating that the genus Halosiccatus should be merged with Halomicrobium. Halomicrobium katesii Kharroub et al. 2008 is proposed as a later heterotypic synonym of Halomicrobium mukohataei (Ihara et al. 1997) Oren et al. 2002. An additional species is also described (strains LT50T and TH30), and was isolated from different Gobi saline soil samples of Tarim Basin, Xinjiang, China. Phenotypic, chemotaxonomic, genomic and phylogenetic properties indicated that strains LT50T (=CGMCC 1.15187T = JCM 30837T) and TH30 (=CGMCC 1.15189 = JCM 30839) represent a novel species of the genus Halomicrobium, for which the name Halomicrobium salinisoli sp. nov. is proposed.

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