BMC Genomic Data (Jun 2024)

High-quality genome assembly and annotation of five bacteria isolated from the Abu Dhabi sabkha-shore region

  • Beenish Sarfraz,
  • Jean Tuyisabe,
  • Louis De Montfort,
  • Abdulrahman Ibrahim,
  • Shamma Z. Abdulkreem Almansoori,
  • Haya Alajami,
  • Asma Almeqbaali,
  • Biduth Kundu,
  • Vishnu Sukumari Nath,
  • Esam Eldin Saeed,
  • Ajay Kumar Mishra,
  • Khaled Michel Hazzouri,
  • Raja Almaskari,
  • Abhishek Kumar Sharma,
  • Naganeeswaran Sudalaimuthuasari,
  • Khaled M. A. Amiri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12863-024-01246-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
pp. 1 – 4

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives Sabkhas represent polyextreme environments characterized by elevated salinity levels, intense ultraviolet (UV) radiation exposure, and extreme temperature fluctuations. In this study, we present the complete genomes of five bacterial isolates isolated from the sabkha-shore region and investigate their genomic organization and gene annotations. A better understanding of the bacterial genomic organization and genetic adaptations of these bacteria holds promise for engineering microbes with tailored functionalities for diverse industrial and agricultural applications, including bioremediation and promotion of plant growth under salinity stress conditions. Data description We present a comprehensive genome sequencing and annotation of five bacteria (kcgeb_sa, kcgeb_sc, kcgeb_sd, kcgeb_S4, and kcgeb_S11) obtained from the shores of the Abu Dhabi Sabkha region. Initial bacterial identification was conducted through 16 S rDNA amplification and sequencing. Employing a hybrid genome assembly technique combining Illumina short reads (NovaSeq 6000) and Oxford Nanopore long reads (MinION), we obtained complete annotated high-quality gap-free genome sequences. The genome sizes of the kcgeb_sa, kcgeb_sc, kcgeb_sd, kcgeb_S4, and kcgeb_S11 isolates were determined to be 2.4 Mb, 4.1 Mb, 2.9 Mb, 5.05 Mb, and 4.1 Mb, respectively. Our analysis conclusively assigned the bacterial isolates as Staphylococcus capitis (kcgeb_sa), Bacillus spizizenii (kcgeb_sc and kcgeb_S11), Pelagerythrobacter marensis (kcgeb_sd), and Priestia aryabhattai (kcgeb_S4).

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