Affiliation:
1. NITE Genome Analysis Center, Department of Biotechnology, National Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NITE), 2-10-49 Nishihara, Shibuya-ku, Tokyo 151-0066, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The soil actinomycete
Kocuria rhizophila
belongs to the suborder
Micrococcineae
, a divergent bacterial group for which only a limited amount of genomic information is currently available.
K. rhizophila
is also important in industrial applications; e.g., it is commonly used as a standard quality control strain for antimicrobial susceptibility testing. Sequencing and annotation of the genome of
K. rhizophila
DC2201 (NBRC 103217) revealed a single circular chromosome (2,697,540 bp; G+C content of 71.16%) containing 2,357 predicted protein-coding genes. Most of the predicted proteins (87.7%) were orthologous to actinobacterial proteins, and the genome showed fairly good conservation of synteny with taxonomically related actinobacterial genomes. On the other hand, the genome seems to encode much smaller numbers of proteins necessary for secondary metabolism (one each of nonribosomal peptide synthetase and type III polyketide synthase), transcriptional regulation, and lateral gene transfer, reflecting the small genome size. The presence of probable metabolic pathways for the transformation of phenolic compounds generated from the decomposition of plant materials, and the presence of a large number of genes associated with membrane transport, particularly amino acid transporters and drug efflux pumps, may contribute to the organism's utilization of root exudates, as well as the tolerance to various organic compounds.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
78 articles.
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