A collection of 611
Pseudomonas
isolated from 14 sampling sites along the Danube River were identified previously by MALDI-TOF MS with the VITEK MS system and were grouped in 53 clusters by their main protein profiles. The strains were identified in the present study at the phylospecies level by
rpoD
gene sequencing. Partial sequences of the
rpoD
gene of 190 isolates representatives of all clusters were analyzed. Strains in the same MALDI-TOF cluster were grouped in the same phylospecies when they shared a minimum 95% similarity in their
rpoD
sequences. The sequenced strains were assigned to 34 known species (108 strains) and to 32 possible new species (82 strains). The 611 strains were identified at the phylospecies level combining both methods. Most strains were assigned to phylospecies in the
Pseudomonas putida
phylogenetic group of species. Special attention was given to 14 multidrug resistant strains that could not be assigned to any known
Pseudomonas
species and were considered environmental reservoir of antibiotic resistance genes. Coverage indices and rarefaction curves demonstrated that at least 50% of the
Pseudomonas
species in the Danube River able to grow in the isolation conditions have been identified at the species level. Main objectives were the confirmation of the correlation between the protein profile clusters detected by MALDI-TOF MS and the phylogeny of
Pseudomonas
strains based on the
rpoD
gene sequence, the assessment of the higher species discriminative power of the
rpoD
gene sequence, as well as the estimation of the high diversity of
Pseudomonas
ssp. along the Danube river. This study highlights the
Pseudomonas
species diversity in freshwater ecosystems and the usefulness of the combination of MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry for the dereplication of large sets of strains and the
rpoD
gene sequences for rapid and accurate identifications at the species level.
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