Login / Signup

Neisseria montereyensis sp. nov., Isolated from Oropharynx of California Sea Lion (Zalophus californianus): Genomic, Phylogenetic, and Phenotypic Study.

Dmitriy V VolokhovTatiana A ZagorodnyayaVyacheslav A FurtakGeetha NattanmaiLinnell RandallSherly JoseYamei GaoFrances M GullandTobias EisenbergPierluigi DelmonteJochen BlomKara K Mitchell
Published in: Current microbiology (2023)
A novel Neisseria strain, designated CSL10203-ORH2 T , was isolated from the oropharynx of a wild California sea lion (Zalophus californianus) that was admitted to The Marine Mammal Center in California, USA. The strain was originally cultured from an oropharyngeal swab on BD Phenylethyl Alcohol (PEA) agar with 5% sheep blood under aerobic conditions. Phylogenetic analyses based on 16S rRNA, rplF, and rpoB gene sequences and the core genome sequences indicated that the strain was most closely related to only N. zalophi CSL 7565 T . The average nucleotide identity and digital DNA-DNA hybridization values between strain CSL10203-ORH2 T  and the closely related species N. zalophi CSL 7565 T were 89.84 and 39.70%, respectively, which were significantly lower than the accepted species-defined thresholds for describing novel prokaryotic species at the genomic level. Both type strains were phenotypically similar but can be easily and unambiguously distinguished between each other by the analysis of their housekeeping genes, e.g., rpoB, gyrB, or argF. The major fatty acids in both type strains were C 12:0, C 16:0, C 16:1-c9 , and C 18:1- c 11 . Based on the genomic, phenotypic, and phylogenetic properties, the novel strain represents a novel species of the genus Neisseria, for which the name Neisseria montereyensis sp. nov. with the type strain CSL10203-ORH2 T (= DSM 114706 T  = CCUG 76428 T  = NCTC 14721 T ) is proposed. The genome G + C content is 45.84% and the complete draft genome size is 2,310,535 bp.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • copy number
  • escherichia coli
  • fatty acid
  • circulating tumor
  • gene expression
  • transcription factor
  • high intensity
  • alcohol consumption