Whole genome sequencing and comparative genomic studies of Priestia filamentosa JURBA-X for its drought-tolerance, plant-growth promotion, and fluorescent characteristics

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Priestia filamentosa JURBA-X is a nonmotile, endospore-forming, and Gram-positive bacterium isolated from a rhizosphere soil sample of groundnut fields in Andhra Pradesh, India, during summer. JURBA-X exhibits chains of filamentous morphology with vibrant yellow fluorescence. It shows tolerance to drought stress, phosphate solubilization, siderophore production, and antibacterial activity. 16s rRNA and single-copy orthologous DNA gyrase subunit B-based phylogenies suggested its closeness with Priestia filamentosa spp., leading to its classification as P. filamentosa JURBA-X. The whole genome was assembled into 5,113,908 bp, distributed across 55 contigs with a GC content of 36.59% and 5,352 protein-coding genes. Genome-genome distance and average nucleotide identity confirmed its designation as a novel strain within P. filamentosa. Assignment of genes/proteins in diverse functions such as drought tolerance, plant growth promotion (PGP), lantibiotics, polyketides, vitamin synthesis, siderophores production, and phosphate solubilization highlight its potential utilization in agriculture as a PGPR and industrial production of antimicrobial agent, vitamins, and biopolymers. Our research concluded that the fluorescence exhibited by JURBA-X is potentially attributed to the production of resistomycin, which might have been horizontally transferred from Streptomyces resistomycificus as inferred by the homology of resistomycin (rem) biosynthesis cluster genes.

Article activity feed