Abstract

Caves are extreme underground environments colonized by oligotrophic bacterial communities that influence mineral transformations. The identification at the species level is important and this study aims to the taxonomic characterisation of four bacterial strains previously isolated from rock surfaces and water samples from a karstic cave located on Mallorca (Spain) that were assigned to the genus Pseudomonas according to 16S rRNA nucleotide sequence analysis. Sequence analysis of the RNA polymerase sigma factor gene (rpoD) allocated these strains to the P. fluorescens lineage within the P. anguilliseptica phylogenetic group, close to the P. benzenivorans type strain. A polyphasic taxonomic approach included phenotypic characterization, fatty acid composition analysis, and whole-cell protein profiling, together with phylogenomic data. The results supported the proposal of a new species in the Pseudomonas genus. Characteristic fatty acid methyl esters of members of the Pseudomonas genus were present (C16:0, C10:0 3-OH, C12:0 2-OH and C12:0 3-OH) and the C12:1 3OH content differentiated these strains from P. benzenivorans. The genomic G + C mol% content of the four sequenced genomes was 66.9%. The average nucleotide indices based on BLAST analysis and the calculation of genome-to-genome distance with respect to their closest relative were lower than 88% and 30%, respectively. These data confirm that the four isolates, R1b-4, R1b-52A, A2bC-1 and R1b-54T, represent a new species, for which the name Pseudomonas lalucatii is proposed, with strain R1b-54T as the type strain (=CCUG 74754T = CECT 30179T). This is the first species in the P. anguilliseptica group isolated from this extreme habitat.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call