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Halomonadaceae

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11-435: Aidingimonas Carnimonas Chromohalobacter Cobetia Deleya Halomonas Halotalea Halovibrio Kushneria Modicisalibacter Salicola Salinicola Volcaniella Zymobacter Halomonadaceae is a family of halophilic Pseudomonadota . The family was originally described in 1988 to contain the genera Halomonas and Deleya . In 1989, Chromobacterium marismortui

22-462: A new genus called Kushneria (5 species) Several singleton genera were created recently: in 2007, Halotalea alkalilenta was described, Aidingimonas halophila in 2009, Halospina denitrificans in 2006, Modicisalibacter tunisiensis in 2009 Salinicola socius in 2009. To the latter genus two species were transferred Halomonas salaria as Salinicola salarius and Chromohalobacter salarius as Salinicola halophilus . The family also contain

33-612: A particular strain the family Halomonadaceae, named GFAJ-1 , isolated and cultured from sediments collected along the shore of Mono Lake , near Yosemite National Park in eastern California . This GFAJ-1 strain of Halomonadaceae can grow in the presence of high concentrations of arsenic . Aidingimonas Aidingimonas is a genus in the phylum Pseudomonadota ( Bacteria ). The name Aidingimonas derives from: Neo-Latin noun Aidingum , Aiding (a lake located in Xinjiang province of north-west China); and monas (μονάς) , monad

44-455: A unit, a monad; Neo-Latin thus Aidingimonas , a monad from Aiding Lake. Members of the genus Aidingimonas can be referred to as aidingimonads ( viz. Trivialisation of names ). The genus contains a single species, namely A. halophila ( Wang et al . 2009, type species of the genus); hals, halos (ἅλς, ἁλός), salt; and phila philē (φίλη)), friend, loving; thus halophila , salt-loving). This Oceanospirillales article

55-541: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Oceanospirillales Alcanivoracaceae Balneatrichaceae Endozoicomonadaceae Hahellaceae Halomonadaceae Kangiellaceae Litoricolaceae Oceanospirillaceae Oleiphilaceae Saccharospirillaceae The Oceanospirillales are an order of Pseudomonadota with ten families. Bacteria in the Oceanospirillales are metabolically and morphologically diverse, with some able to grow in

66-483: The Oceanospirillales include hydrocarbon-degrading groups such as Oleispira antarctica , Thalassolituus oleivorans , and Oleiphilus messinensis , which were found in the indigenous microbial community in deep waters after the Deepwater Horizon oil spill in 2010. They are also common members of bacterial communities in the water column of the hadal zone of ocean trenches. The order Oceanospirillales

77-419: The presence of oxygen and others requiring an anaerobic environment. Members of the Oceanospirillales can be halotolerant or halophilic and require high salt concentrations to grow. While they grow in diverse niches, all Oceanospirillales derive their energy from the breakdown of various organic products. Bacteria in the Oceanospirillales are motile except for those in the genus Alcanivorax . Bacteria in

88-399: The recently discovered but uncultured bacterium " Candidatus Portiera aleyrodidarum" (primary endosymbionts of whiteflies ). Note: Species of Deleya and Halovibrio are now Halomonas The names derives from Halomonas, which is the type genus of the family, plus the suffix -aceae, ending to denote a family Geomicrobiologist Felisa Wolfe-Simon with a NASA funded team is researching

99-466: The strain of Halovibrio variabilis DSM 3051 and DSM 3050 differed and the latter was made type strain of the Halovibrio , which remains still in use. and now comprising two species (the other being Halovibrio denitrificans) In 2002, Halomonas marina was transferred to its own genus Cobetia , and in 2009 Halomonas marisflavi , Halomonas indalinina . and Halomonas avicenniae were transferred to

110-407: Was not placed in the family due to the lack of two out of 15 descriptive 16S rRNA signature sequences, but it has been proposed to reclassify it into the family. In 1996, the family was later reorganised by unifying genera Deleya , Halomonas and Halovibrio and the species Paracoccus halodenitrificans into Halomonas and placing Zymobacter in this family. However, it was later discovered that

121-462: Was reclassified as Chromohalobacter marismortui forming a third genus in the family Halomonadaceae. Subsequently, in 1990 a species was discovered and was originally proposed to be called Volcaniella eurihalina forming a new genus in the Halomonadaceae , but was later (in 1995) reclassified as a member of the genus Halomonas . The species Carnimonas nigrificans (sole member of genus)

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