Ther.mo.an.a.e.ro.ba'cu.lum. Gr. masc. adj.
thermos
, hot; Gr. pref.
an-
, not; Gr. masc. n.
aer
, air; L. neut. n.
baculum
, rod; N.L. neut. n.
Thermoanaerobaculum
, rod that grows in the absence of air at high temperatures.
Acidobacteria / Thermoanaerobaculia / Thermoanaerobaculales / Thermoanaerobaculaceae / Thermoanaerobaculum
Cells are Gram‐stain‐negative, nonmotile, strictly anaerobic, and rod shaped. Reproduce by binary fission. Chemoheterotrophic with the ability to grow fermentatively on pyruvate, yeast extract, or peptone. Capable of reducing Fe(III) and Mn(IV). Moderately thermophilic. The major fatty acids are iso‐C
15:0
, iso‐C
16:0
, anteiso‐C
17:0
, and iso‐C
17:0
. Iso‐diabolic acid and other ether‐linked lipids are not present. The polar lipids are diphosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylglycerol, and phosphatidylethanolamine. The major isoprenoid quinone is MK‐10, and the major polyamine is
sym
‐homospermidine. Phylogenetically,
Thermoanaerobaculum
is located in the phylum
Acidobacteria
within the family
Thermoanaerobaculaceae
, order
Thermoanaerobaculales
, and class
Thermoanaerobaculia
. Represents the first genus to be described within
Acidobacteria
subdivision 23. Known habitats are terrestrial hot springs.
DNA G + C content (mol%)
: 63.0 (genome sequence).
Type species:
Thermoanaerobaculum aquaticum
Losey et al. 2013
VP
.