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Brenneria

Brady, Carrie; Coutinho, Teresa

Authors

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Carrie Brady Carrie.Brady@uwe.ac.uk
Senior Lecturer - CHSS - SOAS

Teresa Coutinho



Abstract

The genus Brenneria was created to accommodate bacteria causing disease on woody hosts. Species cause a range of cankers, wilts and necroses on willow, oak, alder, walnut and are also associated with disease-causing species of Lonsdalea. Cells are Gram-negative, facultativley anaerobic, motile, short rods which appear singly or rarely in pairs. Species are mesophilic, favouring growth temperatures of 28 – 30 °C, and prefer low salt media and neutral pH. Carbon sources such as glucose, fructose, sucrose, galactose and N-acetylglucosamine are readily assimilated and fermented. Species form a monophyletic clade when phylogenetic analysis is based on multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) or whole genome sequences, while 16S rRNA gene sequence phylogenies indicate that the genus is polyphyletic. Major fatty acids are C16:0, C18:1ω7c, C17:0 cyclo, and summed features 2 (iso-C16:1 and/or C14:0 3-OH) and 3 (C16:1 ω7c and /or iso-C15:0 2-OH) and the DNA G + C content is 51.1 – 56.2 mol % (Tm and genome analysis).
Type species: Brenneria salicis (Day 1924) Hauben et al. 1999VP.

Citation

Brady, C., & Coutinho, T. (2021). Brenneria. In Bergey's Manual of Systematics of Archaea and Bacteria. John Wiley and Sons. https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118960608.gbm01136.pub2

Acceptance Date May 3, 2021
Online Publication Date Sep 30, 2021
Publication Date Sep 30, 2021
Deposit Date Feb 25, 2022
Publisher John Wiley and Sons
Book Title Bergey's Manual of Systematics of Archaea and Bacteria
DOI https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118960608.gbm01136.pub2
Public URL https://uwe-repository.worktribe.com/output/8258757