Timaviella sp.

Mai, Truc, Johansen, Jeffrey R., Pietrasiak, Nicole, Bohunická, Markéta & Martin, Michael P., 2018, Revision of the Synechococcales (Cyanobacteria) through recognition of four families including Oculatellaceae fam. nov. and Trichocoleaceae fam. nov. and six new genera containing 14 species, Phytotaxa 365 (1), pp. 1-59 : 34

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.365.1.1

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03BFDE64-6C4F-FFA5-009A-FCE6FA96FACB

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Timaviella sp.
status

 

Timaviella sp. WMT-WP7-NPA

Description:— D1-D1’ helix 75 nucleotides long, with a 3’ basal unilateral bulge of 8 nucleotides (5’-CAUCCCAA-3’), having several internal loops at positions 14–17/50–54, 21–23/44–46 and 26–27/40–41. Terminal loop 4 nucleotides, 5’-GCAA-3’ ( Fig. 6j View FIGURE 6 ). Box B helix 42 nucleotides long, with a basal internal loop at position 5/37–38, one unpaired adenine residue at position 9 and a U/C mismatch at position 13/29 ( Fig. 7i View FIGURE 7 ). V2 helix 12 nucleotides long ( Fig. 8g View FIGURE 8 ). V3 helix 61 nucleotides long, with three internal loops at positions 5/55–57, 10/48–50 and 23/34–35, separated from the terminal loop by a 5’-GU:AG-3’ clamp ( Fig. 9i View FIGURE 9 ).

Compared to other species, D1’-D1’ helix structure has identical basal sequence (region 1–9/59–75) especially the 3’ side loop and a U/U mismatch at position 9/75 ( Fig. 6j View FIGURE 6 ), and the V3 helix is almost identical in shape to T. obliquedivisa with minor differences in sequence. The strain is similar in the base of Box B helix to T. radians at position 1–5 and its complement on the 3’ strand ( Fig. 7i View FIGURE 7 ); however, it differs in other molecular characteristics.

Collection locality:— White Mountain Wilderness, California, USA.

Taxonomic notes:— The reference material for this species did not survive in culture, and thus has no morphological description. The species has high similarity in the 16S rRNA sequence to other species of this genus ( Table 11), but we do not have enough morphological information to formally describe this as a species within Timaviella .

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