Complete genome sequence of the metabolically versatile photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris.

Article Details

Citation

Larimer FW, Chain P, Hauser L, Lamerdin J, Malfatti S, Do L, Land ML, Pelletier DA, Beatty JT, Lang AS, Tabita FR, Gibson JL, Hanson TE, Bobst C, Torres JL, Peres C, Harrison FH, Gibson J, Harwood CS

Complete genome sequence of the metabolically versatile photosynthetic bacterium Rhodopseudomonas palustris.

Nat Biotechnol. 2004 Jan;22(1):55-61. Epub 2003 Dec 14.

PubMed ID
14704707 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Rhodopseudomonas palustris is among the most metabolically versatile bacteria known. It uses light, inorganic compounds, or organic compounds, for energy. It acquires carbon from many types of green plant-derived compounds or by carbon dioxide fixation, and it fixes nitrogen. Here we describe the genome sequence of R. palustris, which consists of a 5,459,213-base-pair (bp) circular chromosome with 4,836 predicted genes and a plasmid of 8,427 bp. The sequence reveals genes that confer a remarkably large number of options within a given type of metabolism, including three nitrogenases, five benzene ring cleavage pathways and four light harvesting 2 systems. R. palustris encodes 63 signal transduction histidine kinases and 79 response regulator receiver domains. Almost 15% of the genome is devoted to transport. This genome sequence is a starting point to use R. palustris as a model to explore how organisms integrate metabolic modules in response to environmental perturbations.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Cytochrome c2P00091Details