Pseudomonas viridiflava

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Pseudomonas viridiflava
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Bacteria
Phylum: Proteobacteria
Class: Gamma Proteobacteria
Order: Pseudomonadales
Family: Pseudomonadaceae
Genus: Pseudomonas
Species: P. viridiflava
Binomial name
Pseudomonas viridiflava
(Burkholder 1930)
Dowson 1939
Type strain
ATCC 13223

[http://www.angers.inra.fr/cfbp/resultsuite.php?r0=2107&r1=Pseudomonas%20viridiflava&r2=Pseudomonas&r3=viridiflava&r4=&r5=&r6=souche%20type&r7=NCPPB%20635,%20ATCC%2013223,%20CIP%20106699,%20DSM%2011124,%20ICMP%202848,%20LMG%202352&r8=&r9=&r10=Phaseolus%20sp.&r11=&r12=1927&r13=Suisse&r14=&r15=&r16=&r17=&r18=&r19=&r20=&r21=(Burkholder%201930)%20Dowson%201939%20(Approved%20Lists%201980),%20species. CFBP 2107]
CIP 106699
DSM 11124
ICMP 2848
LMG 2352
NCPPB 635
NRRL B-895

pathovars

P. v. pv. primulae
P. v. pv. ribicola
P. v. pv. viridiflava

Synonyms

Phytomonas viridiflava Burkholder 1930

Pseudomonas viridiflava is a fluorescent, Gram-negative, soil bacterium that is pathogenic to plants.[1] It was originally isolated from the dwarf or runner bean, in Switzerland. Based on 16S rRNA analysis, P. viridiflava has been placed in the P. syringae group.[2] Following ribotypical analysis misidentified strains of Pseudomonas syringae pv. ribicola (which infects Ribes aureum) and Pseudomonas syringae pv. primulae (which infects Primula species) were incorporated into this species.[3]

References

  1. Hu et al. (1998 Aug). "Preliminary description of biocidal (syringomycin) activity in fluorescent plant pathogenic Pseudomonas species". J Appl Microbiol 85 (2): 365–71. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2672.1998.00516.x. PMID 9750309. 
  2. Anzai et al. (2000, Jul). "Phylogenetic affiliation of the pseudomonads based on 16S rRNA sequence". Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 50 (4): 1563–89. doi:10.1099/00207713-50-4-1563. PMID 10939664. 
  3. Gardan et al. (1999 Apr). "DNA relatedness among the pathovars of Pseudomonas syringae and description of Pseudomonas tremae sp. nov. and Pseudomonas cannabina sp. nov. (ex Sutic and Dowson 1959)". Int J Syst Bacteriol 49 (2): 469–78. doi:10.1099/00207713-49-2-469. PMID 10319466. 


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