Muricauda ruestringensis

Muricauda ruestringensis is a bacterium. It is a facultatively anaerobic, appendaged bacterium first isolated from the North Sea.[1] Its nearest relative is Zobellia uliginosa. The type strain is strain B1T (= DSM 13258T = LMG 19739T).

Muricauda ruestringensis
Scientific classification
Domain:
Bacteria
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
M. ruestringensis
Binomial name
Muricauda ruestringensis
Bruns, Rohde & Berthe-Corti, 2001

References

  1. Bruns, A.; Rohde, M.; Berthe-Corti, L. (2001). "Muricauda ruestringensis gen. nov., sp. nov., a facultatively anaerobic, appendaged bacterium from German North Sea intertidal sediment". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 51 (6): 1997–2006. doi:10.1099/00207713-51-6-1997. ISSN 1466-5026. PMID 11760940.

Further reading

  • Huntemann, Marcel; Teshima, Hazuki; Lapidus, Alla; Nolan, Matt; Lucas, Susan; Hammon, Nancy; Deshpande, Shweta; Cheng, Jan-Fang; Tapia, Roxanne; Goodwin, Lynne A.; Pitluck, Sam; Liolios, Konstantinos; Pagani, Ioanna; Ivanova, Natalia; Mavromatis, Konstantinos; Mikhailova, Natalia; Pati, Amrita; Chen, Amy; Palaniappan, Krishna; Land, Miriam; Hauser, Loren; Pan, Chongle; Brambilla, Evelyne-Marie; Rohde, Manfred; Spring, Stefan; Göker, Markus; Detter, John C.; Bristow, James; Eisen, Jonathan A.; Markowitz, Victor; Hugenholtz, Philip; Kyrpides, Nikos C.; Klenk, Hans-Peter; Woyke, Tanja (2012). "Complete genome sequence of the facultatively anaerobic, appendaged bacterium Muricauda ruestringensis type strain (B1T)". Standards in Genomic Sciences. 6 (2): 185–193. doi:10.4056/sigs.2786069. ISSN 1944-3277. PMC 3387797. PMID 22768362.
  • Müller, S.; Kiesel, B.; Berthe-Corti, L. (2001). "Muricauda ruestringensis Has an Asymmetric Cell Cycle". Acta Biotechnologica. 21 (4): 343–357. doi:10.1002/1521-3846(200111)21:4<343::AID-ABIO343>3.0.CO;2-2. ISSN 0138-4988.
  • Ludwig, Wolfgang, Jean Euzéby, and William B. Whitman. "Road map of the phyla Bacteroidetes, Spirochaetes, Tenericutes (Mollicutes), Acidobacteria, Fibrobacteres, Fusobacteria, Dictyoglomi, Gemmatimonadetes, Lentisphaerae, Verrucomicrobia, Chlamydiae, and Planctomycetes." Bergey's Manual® of Systematic Bacteriology. Springer New York, 2010. 1–19.


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