Pre_GI: SWBIT SVG BLASTN

Query: NC_013410:2586500 Fibrobacter succinogenes subsp. succinogenes S85 chromosome,

Lineage: Fibrobacter succinogenes; Fibrobacter; Fibrobacteraceae; Fibrobacterales; Fibrobacteres; Bacteria

General Information: Temp: Mesophile; Temp: 37C; Habitat: Host. Cellulolytic rumen bacterium. This bacterium is one of the three most predominant cellulolytic organisms in the rumen. Since cellulose is one of the most abundant carbohydrates on the planet, this organism is, therefore, an important part of the global carbon biogeochemical cycle, converting the mass of fixed carbon generated by photosynthetic organisms back to products that eventually end up as carbon dioxide. Increasing cellulose degradation is an important goal in industrial processes. This organism is highly specialized for cellulose degradation, and is only capable of utilizing cellulose and cellulolytic degradation products as carbon sources. Access to cellulose is a rate-liming step in degradation, and the cellulolytic organisms have devised a number of mechanisms for improving access to this insoluble substrate, one of which is the production of surface-localized cellulases. The active enzymes are cell wall associated, but the presence of cellulosomes, large multiprotein cellulase complexes, has not been detected in this organism. Adherence is another method used to promote cellulose degradation, and this organism produces an extracellular matrix of glycoprotein glycocalyx which allows attachment to insoluble cellulose.

No Graph yet!

Subject: NC_008740:1357312 Marinobacter aquaeolei VT8, complete genome

Lineage: Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus; Marinobacter; Alteromonadaceae; Alteromonadales; Proteobacteria; Bacteria

General Information: Marinobacter aquaeolei VT8, also known as Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus VT8, is a moderately halophilic, hydrocarbon-degrading bacterium isolated from an oil well off the coast of Vietnam. Hydrocarbon-degrading marine bacterium. This organism is a moderately halophilic, hydrocarbon-degrading bacterium which has been isolated from a number of hydrocarbon polluted marine environments. Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus is able to produce biofilms as well as survive in open seawater.