Salisediminibacterium


Salisediminibacterium is a genus of Gram-positive bacteria from the family of Bacillaceae. The type species is Salisediminibacterium halotolerans.
Salisediminibacterium ''beveridgei and Salisediminibacterium selenitireducens were previously species belonging to Bacillus, a genus that has been recognized as displaying extensive polyphyly and has been restricted by recent phylogenetic studies to only include species closely related to Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus cereus.
The name
Salisediminibacterium is derived from the prefix "-salisedimini", and the suffix "-bacterium". Together, Salisediminibacterium translates to a rod from salt sediment.

Biochemical Characteristics and Molecular Signatures

Sources:
Cells are either non-spore formers or spore forming and are variably motile. Catalase and nitrate reduction activities are variable. Most species are halophilic and alkali-tolerant requiring a minimum of 1% NaCl in the medium for growth to occur. S. selenitireducens demonstrates weak microaerophilic growth and anaerobic respiratory growth with Se, As, nitrate, nitrite, trimethylamine oxide and fumarate as electron acceptors.
Analyses of genome sequences from Salisediminibacterium species identified four conserved signature indels for this genus in the following proteins: insulinase family protein, alpha-ketoacid dehydrogenase subunit beta, MBL fold metallo-hydrolase and excinuclease ABC subunit UvrA, which in most cases are exclusively shared by either all or most members of this genus. These CSIs provide a reliable method of identification and differentiation for this genus from other Bacillaceae genera and bacteria.

Taxonomy

Salisediminibacterium, as of May 2021, contains a total of 5 species with validly published names. This branching pattern is also observed in the Genome Taxonomy Database.