Teredinibacter turnerae Distel et al. 2002, sp. nov.
商品貨號
B208556
Deposited As
Teredinobacter turnerae Distel et al. 2002, sp. nov.
Strain Designations
T7901
Application
Degrades cellulose
Isolation
From the shipworm Bankia gouldi collected at the Newport River, Duke Marine Laboratory, Beaufort, North Carolina
Biosafety Level
1
Biosafety classification is based on U.S. Public Health Service Guidelines, it is the responsibility of the customer to ensure that their facilities comply with biosafety regulations for their own country.
Product Format
frozen
Storage Conditions
Frozen: -80°C or colder Freeze-Dried: 2°C to 8°C Live Culture: See Propagation Section
Disclosure
This material is cited in a US or other Patent and may not be used to
infringe the claims. Depending on the wishes of the Depositor, ATCC may be
required to inform the Patent Depositor of the party to which the material was
furnished. This material may not have been produced or characterized by ATCC.
Preceptrol®
no
Type Strain
no
Comments
This culture was originally deposited as Strain T7902. Comparison of 10kb of contiguous sequence including the 3 end of the 23S rRNA, the 23S-5S spacer, the 5S rRNA and 12 subsequent contiguous open reading frames from ATCC 39867 with the genome sequence determined for Strain T7901 obtained from the original stock in the Waterbury collection revealed identical sequence alignement. However, ATCC 39867 differed by ~6% in nucleotide sequence from T7902 over 8kb of homologous protein coding sequence from the same genome region. Further, comparison of the ribotype patterns from ATCC 39867 and the original stocks of T7901 and T7902 from the Waterbury collection demonstrated that ATCC 39867 matched the T7901 pattern and differed from T7902. Personal communication Daniel L. Distel, Ph.D. Executive Director, Ocean Genome Legacy (April 2009)
Waterbury JB, et al. Bacteria for cellulose digestion. US Patent 4,861,721 dated Aug 29 1989
Distel DL, et al. Phylogenetic characterization and in situ localization of the bacterial symbiont of shipworms (Teredinidae: Bivalvia) by using 16S rRNA sequence analysis and oligodeoxynucleotide probe hybridization. Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 57: 2376-2382, 1991. PubMed: 1722662
Distel DL, et al. Teredinibacter turnerae gen. nov., sp. nov., a dinitrogen-fixing, cellulolytic, endosymbiotic gamma-proteobacterium isolated from the gills of wood-boring molluscs (Bivalvia: Teredinidae). Int. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol. 52(Pt 6): 2261-2269, 2002. PubMed: 12508896