Phylogeny of the genus Nocardia based on reassessed 16S rRNA gene sequences reveals underspeciation and division of strains classified as Nocardia asteroides into three established species and two unnamed taxons.

Andreas Roth, Sebastian Andrees, Reiner M Kroppenstedt, Dag Harmsen, Harald Mauch

Institut für Mikrobiologie und Immunologie, Lungenkliniuk Heckeshorn, Berlin,

Journal Article: Journal of Clinical Microbiology (impact factor: 4.16). 03/2003; 41(2):851-6.

Abstract

Conventional identification of Nocardia in the routine laboratory remains problematic due to a paucity of reliable phenotypic tests and due to the yet-unresolved taxonomy of strains classified as belonging to the species Nocardia asteroides, which comprises the type strain and isolates with drug pattern types II and VI. The 16S rRNA gene of 74 representative strains of the genus Nocardia, encompassing 25 established species, was sequenced in order to provide a molecular basis for accurate species identification and with the aim of reassessing the phylogeny of taxons assigned to the species N. asteroides. The result of this phylogenetic analysis confirms that the interspecies heterogeneity of closely related nocardial species can be considerably low (a sequence divergence of only 0.5% was found between N. paucivorans and N. brevicatena). We observed a sequence microheterogeneity (sequence divergence of fewer than five bases) in 8 of 11 species of which more than one strain in the species was studied. At least 10 taxons were found that merit description as new species. Strains previously classified as N. asteroides fell into five distinct phylogenetic groups: the type strain cluster (N. asteroides sensu strictu), N. abscessus, N. cyriacigeorgica, and two clusters closely related to N. carnea or N. flavorosea. The strains within the latter two groups probably represent new species, pending further genetic and phenotypic evaluation. Restricted phenotypic data revealed that N. abscessus, N. cyriacigeorgica, and the two Nocardia species taxons are equivalent to drug patterns I, VI, and II, respectively. In the future, these data will help in finding species-specific markers after adoption of a more precise nomenclature for isolates closely related to N. asteroides and unravel confusing phenotypic data obtained in the past for unresolved groups of strains that definitely belong to separate taxons from a phylogenetic point of view.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

10 taxons
 
11 species
 
distinct phylogenetic groups
 
drug pattern types II
 
N. abscessus
 
N. asteroides
 
N. brevicatena
 
N. cyriacigeorgica
 
new species
 
nocardial species
 
precise nomenclature
 
reliable phenotypic tests
 
Restricted phenotypic data
 
routine laboratory
 
separate taxons
 
species N. asteroides
 
species Nocardia asteroides
 
species-specific markers
 
two Nocardia species taxons
 
unravel confusing phenotypic data