Abstract
Three Gram-stain-negative, aerobic, short rod-shaped and motile strains (FXH3WT, SHGZ20W and SMYT11WT) were isolated from freshwater environments in China. Comparisons based on the 16S rRNA gene sequences indicated that strains FXH3WT and SHGZ20W showed the highest 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity of about 99.6% to ‘Luteimonas cellulosilyticus’ MIC 1.5, and strain SMYT11WT showed the highest 16S rRNA gene sequence similarity of 99.8% to Luteimonas fraxinea D4P002T, respectively. Observing the phylogenetic trees reconstructed based on the 16S rRNA gene sequences, the species of genera Luteimonas and Lysobacter were not monophyletic and often mixed together. The further reconstructed phylogenomic tree and Genome Taxonomy Database also showed that the species of both genera were polyphyletic, implying that the current taxonomic status of the species of both genera was questionable. The calculated OrthoANIu, digital DNA–DNA hybridization and average amino acid sequence identity (AAI) values supported that strains FXH3WT and SHGZ20W should belong to the same novel species and strain SMYT11WT should also represent an independent novel species. Combining the AAI values and phylogenomic analyses, the species of genera Luteimonas and Lysobacter should be reassigned to 12 genera (Luteimonas, Lysobacter, Cognatiluteimonas, Noviluteimonas, Pseudoluteimonas, Solilutibacter, Agrilutibacter, Cognatilysobacter, Marilutibacter, Novilysobacter, Montanilutibacter and Aerolutibacter). The AAI values 69.5–76.0% were also proposed as the Lysobacteraceae-specific thresholds for genus delineation. Strain SMYT11WT should represent a novel species of the genus Luteimonas, for which the name Luteimonas flava sp. nov. (type strains SMYT11WT=GDMCC 1.4275T=KCTC 8304T) is proposed. Strains FXH3WT and SHGZ20W should represent a novel species of a new genus Aquilutibacter rugosus gen. nov., sp. nov. The type strain of the type species is FXH3WT (=GDMCC 1.4096T=KCTC 8154T).
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More From: International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology
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