Taxonomy has 2 main functions
describe as completely as possible the basic taxonomic units, or species
devise an appropriate way of arranging and cataloguing these units
Match:
Classification is
Nomenclature is
Identification is
Who was Carl Linnaeus?
Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778)
Swedish botanist, zoologist, and physician who formalized binomial nomenclature
→ modern system of naming organisms
“Father of modern taxonomy“
List the taxonomic hierarchy
For a description of a new taxon, the following must be included
Statement or tabulation of the characteristics of each strain
List of characteristics considered essential for membership in the taxon
List of characteristics which qualify the taxon for membership in the next higher taxon
The reactions of the type strain of a new species
List of diagnostic characteristics, i.e. characters which distinguish the taxon from closely related taxa
Designation of the type for that taxon
Genome sequences of the type strains of prokaryotes
16S rRNA gene should also be provided (separately from genome sequence)
Proof of deposit that any proposed prokaryote type strains have been deposited in two or more public culture collections (with no restrictions)
What is the difference between species and strain?
Species
‘A species consists of strains of common origin which are more similar to each other than they are to any other strain’
Strain
‘… an isolate or group of isolates that can be distinguished from other isolates of the same genus and species by phenotypic characteristics or genotypic characteristics or both’
What is a clone?
Clone
‘Genetically related isolates (clones) are isolates that are indistinguishable from each other by a variety of genetic tests, or that are so similar that they are presumed to be derived from a common parent’
What is a type strain?
The type strain is essentially the “definition” of a species
Serves as the comparative reference point for the identification of new strains and the assignment to existing species
What are taxonomic genotyping methods?
What are taxonomic phenotyping methods?
What is the C/G content in bacterial genomes?
between 25% and 75%
For what DNA-DNA hybridisation similarity can you say that two organisms are the same species?
Who published the first gene sequence-based quantitative assessment of phylogenetic (evolutionary) relationships
(paper contained a single table of numbers that compared sequences derived from small subunit ribosomal (r)RNAs of different organisms)
Why is Ribosomal RNA seen as a molecular clock?
Found in all living organisms
rRNAs offer a type of sequence information that makes them excellent descriptors of an organism's evolutionary history
No detectable horizontal gene transfer
very important for prokaryotes (bacteria)
Large and growing databases •
SILVA contains ~10 million SSU rRNA
What is 16S rRNA?
component of the 30S small subunit of a prokaryotic ribosome that binds to the Shine -Dalgarno sequence
Why are genes coding for 16S rRNA used in reconstructing phylogenies?
due to the slow rates of evolution of this region of the gene
For what Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) similarity can you say that two organisms are the same genus?
For what Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU) similarity can you say that two organisms are the same species?
What is Amplicon Sequence Variant AVR?
For what amino acid identity (AAI) similarity can you say that two organisms are the same species?
For what average nucleotide identity (ANI) similarity can you say that two organisms are the same species?
What is a new culture-independent method to determine composition of microbial communities?
Shotgun metagenomics -> MAGs Metagenome Assembled Genomes
BUT there are issues that limit the value of these genomes
• gaps
• local assembly errors
• chimeras
• contamination by fragments from other genomes
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