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Phylogenetic study of the species within the family Streptomycetaceae

Cited 178 time in Web of Science Cited 197 time in Scopus
Authors

Labeda, D. P.; Goodfellow, M.; Brown, R.; Ward, A. C.; Lanoot, B.; Vanncanneyt, M.; Swings, J.; Kim, S. -B.; Liu, Z.; Chun, J.; Tamura, T.; Oguchi, A.; Kikuchi, T.; Kikuchi, H.; Nishii, T.; Tsuji, K.; Yamaguchi, Y.; Tase, A.; Takahashi, M.; Sakane, T.; Suzuki, K. I.; Hatano, K.

Issue Date
2012-01
Publisher
Kluwer Academic Publishers
Citation
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, International Journal of General and Molecular Microbiology, Vol.101 No.1, pp.73-104
Abstract
Species of the genus Streptomyces, which constitute the vast majority of taxa within the family Streptomycetaceae, are a predominant component of the microbial population in soils throughout the world and have been the subject of extensive isolation and screening efforts over the years because they are a major source of commercially and medically important secondary metabolites. Taxonomic characterization of Streptomyces strains has been a challenge due to the large number of described species, greater than any other microbial genus, resulting from academic and industrial activities. The methods used for characterization have evolved through several phases over the years from those based largely on morphological observations, to subsequent classifications based on numerical taxonomic analyses of standardized sets of phenotypic characters and, most recently, to the use of molecular phylogenetic analyses of gene sequences. The present phylogenetic study examines almost all described species (615 taxa) within the family Streptomycetaceae based on 16S rRNA gene sequences and illustrates the species diversity within this family, which is observed to contain 130 statistically supported clades, as well as many unsupported and single member clusters. Many of the observed clades are consistent with earlier morphological and numerical taxonomic studies, but it is apparent that insufficient variation is present in the 16S rRNA gene sequence within the species of this family to permit bootstrap-supported resolution of relationships between many of the individual clusters.
ISSN
0003-6072
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/189861
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10482-011-9656-0
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