Standards in Genomic Sciences (Dec 2017)

The complete genome sequence of the rumen bacterium Butyrivibrio hungatei MB2003

  • Nikola Palevich,
  • William J. Kelly,
  • Sinead C. Leahy,
  • Eric Altermann,
  • Jasna Rakonjac,
  • Graeme T. Attwood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40793-017-0285-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Butyrivibrio hungatei MB2003 was isolated from the plant-adherent fraction of rumen contents from a pasture-grazed New Zealand dairy cow, and was selected for genome sequencing in order to examine its ability to degrade plant polysaccharides. The genome of MB2003 is 3.39 Mb and consists of four replicons; a chromosome, a secondary chromosome or chromid, a megaplasmid and a small plasmid. The genome has an average G + C content of 39.7%, and encodes 2983 putative protein-coding genes. MB2003 is able to use a variety of monosaccharide substrates for growth, with acetate, butyrate and formate as the principal fermentation end-products, and the genes encoding these metabolic pathways have been identified. MB2003 is predicted to encode an extensive repertoire of CAZymes with 78 GHs, 7 CEs, 1 PL and 78 GTs. MB2003 is unable to grow on xylan or pectin, and its role in the rumen appears to be as a utilizer of monosaccharides, disaccharides and oligosaccharides made available by the degradative activities of other bacterial species.

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