Xanthobacter tagetidis

Xanthobacter tagetidis is a bacterium from the family of Xanthobacteraceae which has been isolated from soil from Root balls around the plant Tagetes patula in the United Kingdom.[1][3][4][5] Xanthobacter tagetidis has the ability to grow on substituted thiophenes.[4][6][7]

Xanthobacter tagetidis
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
X. tagetidis
Binomial name
Xanthobacter tagetidis
Padden et al. 1997[1]
Type strain
ATCC 700314, DSM 11105, NCIMB 13547, TAG-T2C, TagT2C[2]

Further reading

  • Padden, A. Nikki; Kelly, Donovan P.; Wood, A. P. (27 February 1998). "Chemolithoautotrophy and mixotrophy in the thiophene-2-carboxylic acid-utilizing Xanthobacter tagetidis". Archives of Microbiology. 169 (3): 249–256. doi:10.1007/s002030050568. PMID 9477260.
  • Padden, AN; Rainey, FA; Kelly, DP; Wood, AP (April 1997). "Xanthobacter tagetidis sp. nov., an organism associated with Tagetes species and able to grow on substituted thiophenes". International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. 47 (2): 394–401. doi:10.1099/00207713-47-2-394. PMID 9103627.
  • editor-in-chief, George M. Garrity (2005). Bergey's manual of systematic bacteriology (2nd ed.). New York: Springer. ISBN 0-387-24145-0.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
gollark: Or just edit it and hope nobody checks the revision history.
gollark: Besides, the current focus is on random thingss like the serialization, for some inexplicable reason.
gollark: We couldn't even finalize ram mechanics.
gollark: Any strategy guide is going to be completely wrong, depending on how EWO *actually* turns out.
gollark: We may have to bring the EWO page in line with reality eventually.

References

  1. LPSN lpsn.dsmz.de
  2. Straininfo of Xanthobacter tagetidis
  3. ATCC
  4. Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen
  5. UniProt
  6. Padden, AN; Rainey, FA; Kelly, DP; Wood, AP (April 1997). "Xanthobacter tagetidis sp. nov., an organism associated with Tagetes species and able to grow on substituted thiophenes". International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. 47 (2): 394–401. doi:10.1099/00207713-47-2-394. PMID 9103627.
  7. Neilson, Alasdair H.; Allard, Ann-Sofie (2008). Environmental degradation and transformation of organic chemicals ([Updated and expanded]. ed.). Boca Raton: CRC Press/Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-4200-0677-3.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.