Abstract
Organohalide respiration is an anaerobic bacterial respiratory process that uses halogenated hydrocarbons as terminal electron acceptors during electron transport-based energy conservation. This dechlorination process has triggered considerable interest for detoxification of anthropogenic groundwater contaminants. Organohalide-respiring bacteria have been identified from multiple bacterial phyla, and can be categorized as obligate and non-obligate organohalide respirers. The majority of the currently known organohalide-respiring bacteria carry multiple reductive dehalogenase genes. Analysis of a curated set of reductive dehalogenases reveals that sequence similarity and substrate specificity are generally not correlated, making functional prediction from sequence information difficult. In this article, an orthologue-based classification system for the reductive dehalogenases is proposed to aid integration of new sequencing data and to unify terminology.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society. Series B, Biological Sciences |
Volume | 368 |
Issue number | 1616 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 2013 |
Keywords
- dehalococcoides sp strain
- vinyl-chloride reductase
- desulfitobacterium-frappieri pcp-1
- strictly anaerobic bacterium
- multiple sequence alignment
- complete genome sequence
- best-fit models
- dehalospirillum-multivorans
- enrichment culture
- dehalobacter-re