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Comparative analysis of the complete genome sequence of the plant growth-promoting bacterium Bacillus amyloliquefaciens FZB42
ISSN
1087-0156
Date Issued
2007
Author(s)
Chen, Xiao Hua
Koumoutsi, Alexandra
Scholz, Romy
Eisenreich, Andreas
Schneider, Kathrin
Heinemeyer, Isabelle
Voss, Bjoern
Hess, Wolfgang R.
Reva, Oleg
Junge, Helmut
Voigt, Birgit
Jungblut, Peter R.
Vater, Joachim
Suessmuth, Roderich D.
Strittmatter, Axel W.
Borriss, Rainer
DOI
10.1038/nbt1325
Abstract
Bacillus amyloliquefaciens FZB42 is a Gram-positive, plant-associated bacterium, which stimulates plant growth and produces secondary metabolites that suppress soil-borne plant pathogens. Its 3,918-kb genome, containing an estimated 3,693 protein-coding sequences, lacks extended phage insertions, which occur ubiquitously in the closely related Bacillus subtilis 168 genome. The B. amyloliquefaciens FZB42 genome reveals an unexpected potential to produce secondary metabolites, including the polyketides bacillaene and difficidin. More than 8.5% of the genome is devoted to synthesizing antibiotics and siderophores by pathways not involving ribosomes. Besides five gene clusters, known from B. subtilis to mediate nonribosomal synthesis of secondary metabolites, we identified four giant gene clusters absent in B. subtilis 168. The pks2 gene cluster encodes the components to synthesize the macrolactin core skeleton.