1. Genome sequence of the Listia angolensis microsymbiont Microvirga lotononidis strain WSM3557.
- Author
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Reeve, Wayne, Ardley, Julie, Tian, Rui, Meyer, Sofie, Terpolilli, Jason, Melino, Vanessa, Tiwari, Ravi, Yates, Ronald, O'Hara, Graham, Howieson, John, Ninawi, Mohamed, Zhang, Xiaojing, Bruce, David, Detter, Chris, Tapia, Roxanne, Han, Cliff, Wei, Chia-Lin, Huntemann, Marcel, Han, James, and Chen, I-Min
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GENOMES ,RNA ,NUCLEIC acids ,PROTEINS ,GENES - Abstract
Microvirga lotononidis is a recently described species of root-nodule bacteria that is an effective nitrogen- (N) fixing microsymbiont of the symbiotically specific African legume Listia angolensis (Welw. ex Bak.) B.-E. van Wyk & Boatwr. M. lotononidis possesses several properties that are unusual in root-nodule bacteria, including pigmentation and the ability to grow at temperatures of up to 45°C. Strain WSM3557 is an aerobic, motile, Gram-negative, non-spore-forming rod isolated from a L. angolensis root nodule collected in Chipata, Zambia in 1963. This is the first report of a complete genome sequence for the genus Microvirga. Here we describe the features of Microvirga lotononidis strain WSM3557, together with genome sequence information and annotation. The 7,082,538 high-quality-draft genome is arranged in 18 scaffolds of 104 contigs, contains 6,956 protein-coding genes and 84 RNA-only encoding genes, and is one of 20 rhizobial genomes sequenced as part of the DOE Joint Genome Institute 2010 Community Sequencing Program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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