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Sphingomonas cynarae sp. nov., a proteobacterium that produces an unusual type of sphingan

Authors :
Giovanni Mita
Elisabetta Carata
Pietro Alifano
Marcello Salvatore Lenucci
Salvatore Maurizio Tredici
Nicholas C. Carpita
Antonio Gaballo
Graziano Pizzolante
Gabriella Piro
Carlo Marcuccio
Danisha A. Debowles
Miriana Durante
Adelfia Talà
Tala', Adelfia
Lenucci, Marcello Salvatore
Gaballo, A
Durante, M
Tredici, Sm
Debowles, Da
Pizzolante, G
Marcuccio, C
Carata, Elisabetta
Piro, Gabriella
Carpita, Nc
Mita, G
Alifano, Pietro
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Strain SPC-1T was isolated from the phyllosphere of Cynara cardunculus L. var. sylvestris (Lamk) Fiori (wild cardoon), a Mediterranean native plant considered to be the wild ancestor of the globe artichoke and cultivated cardoon. This Gram-stain-negative, catalase-positive, oxidase-negative, non-spore-forming, rod-shaped and non-motile strain secreted copious amounts of an exopolysaccharide, formed slimy, viscous, orange-pigmented colonies and grew optimally at around pH 6.0–6.5 and 26–30 °C in the presence of 0–0.5 % NaCl. Phylogenetic analysis based on comparisons of 16S rRNA gene sequences demonstrated that SPC-1T clustered together with species of the genus Sphingomonas sensu stricto. The G+C content of the DNA (66.1 mol%), the presence of Q-10 as the predominant ubiquinone, sym-homospermidine as the predominant polyamine, 2-hydroxymyristic acid (C14 : 0 2-OH) as the major hydroxylated fatty acid, the absence of 3-hydroxy fatty acids and the presence of sphingoglycolipid supported this taxonomic position. 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis showed that SPC-1T was most closely related to Sphingomonas hankookensis ODN7T, Sphingomonas insulae DS-28T and Sphingomonas panni C52T (98.19, 97.91 and 97.11 % sequence similarities, respectively). However, DNA–DNA hybridization analysis did not reveal any relatedness at the species level. Further differences were apparent in biochemical traits, and fatty acid, quinone and polyamine profiles leading us to conclude that strain SPC-1T represents a novel species of the genus Sphingomonas , for which the name Sphingomonas cynarae sp. nov. is proposed; the type strain is SPC-1T ( = JCM 17498T = ITEM 13494T). A component analysis of the exopolysaccharide suggested that it represents a novel type of sphingan containing glucose, rhamnose, mannose and galactose, while glucuronic acid, which is commonly found in sphingans, was not detected.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b83dd2470ed487ed7a99a8ebc2d77fe2