Reconstituting the genus Mycobacterium

Author:

Meehan Conor J.12ORCID,Barco Roman A.3,Loh Yong-Hwee E.4ORCID,Cogneau Sari51ORCID,Rigouts Leen615ORCID

Affiliation:

1. BCCM/ITM Mycobacterial Culture Collection, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium

2. School of Chemistry and Biosciences, University of Bradford, Bradford, UK

3. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA

4. Norris Medical Library, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California, USA

5. Unit of Mycobacteriology, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Institute of Tropical Medicine, Antwerp, Belgium

6. Department of Biomedical Sciences, Antwerp University, Antwerp, Belgium

Abstract

The definition of a genus has wide-ranging implications both in terms of binomial species names and also evolutionary relationships. In recent years, the definition of the genus Mycobacterium has been debated due to the proposed split of this genus into five new genera ( Mycolicibacterium , Mycolicibacter , Mycolicibacillus , Mycobacteroides and an emended Mycobacterium ). Since this group of species contains many important obligate and opportunistic pathogens, it is important that any renaming of species does not cause confusion in clinical treatment as outlined by the nomen periculosum rule (56a) of the Prokaryotic Code. In this study, we evaluated the proposed and original genus boundaries for the mycobacteria, to determine if the split into five genera was warranted. By combining multiple approaches for defining genus boundaries (16S rRNA gene similarity, amino acid identity index, average nucleotide identity, alignment fraction and percentage of conserved proteins) we show that the original genus Mycobacterium is strongly supported over the proposed five-way split. Thus, we propose that the original genus label be reapplied to all species within this group, with the proposed five genera potentially used as sub-genus complex names.

Publisher

Microbiology Society

Subject

General Medicine,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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