Clostridiaceae

Clostridiaceae
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Bacteria
Division: Firmicutes
Class: Clostridia
Order: Clostridiales
Family: Clostridiaceae
Pribram, 1933
Genera

Acetanaerobacterium
Acetivibrio
Acidaminobacter
Alkaliphilus
Anaerobacter
Anaerotruncus
Anoxynatronum
Bryantella
Butyricicoccus
Caldanaerocella
Caloramator
Caloranaerobacter
Caminicella
Candidatus Arthromitus
Clostridium
Coprobacillus
Dorea
Ethanologenbacterium
Faecalibacterium
Garciella
Guggenheimella
Hespellia
Linmingia
Natronincola
Oxobacter
Parasporobacterium
Sarcina
Soehngenia
Sporobacter
Subdoligranulum
Tepidibacter
Tepidimicrobium
Thermobrachium
Thermohalobacter
Tindallia

The Clostridiaceae are a family of the Clostridia, and contains the Clostridium genus.

The family Clostridiaceae (scientific name) defined by the taxonomic outline of ' Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology ' contains as its core the genus Clostridium (sensu stricto), as well as Acetivibrio, Acidaminobacter, Alkaliphilus, Anaerobacter, Caloramator, Caloranaerobacter, Coprobacillus, Dorea, Natronincola, Oxobacter, Sarcina, Sporobacter, Thermobrachium, Thermohalobacter and Tindallia. The previous inclusion of these additional genera in a family Clostridiaceae is based for the most part on the fact that the type species of these genera are in many cases phylogenetically related to misclassified species of the genus Clostridium. However with the exception of Anaerobacter, Caloramator, Oxobacter, Sarcina and Thermobrachium, these genera fall outside the radiation of what can be considered the true family Clostridiaceae and are now regarded as belonging to other families within the low G + C Gram-positive phylum.

This misclassification is the result of well-known problems of the current taxonimic structure of the traditional genus Clostridium. The phylogenetic analysis of Collins (1994) was the first large-scale comparison of 16S rRNA gene sequences of species of the genus Clostridium and related taxa. The fact that the species of the genus Clostridium did not form a monophyletic group has been shown in a number of studies in which small groups of Clostridium species had been compared as far back as 1981. The comparative study of Collins (1994) and subsequent studies can be used to conclude that more than half of the species currently assigned to the genus Clostridium are in fact not closely related to the type species of the genus, C. butyricum, and from a phylogenetic standpoint should not be included in a newly defined genus Clostridium.

This extensive genetic diversity of the genus Clostridium had been shown using 23S rRNA:DNA hybridization studies back in 1975 by Johnson and Francis (1975), but it was the 16S rRNA gene sequence approach that revealed the actual phylogenetic relationships between the species of this genus and other genera.

The genus Clostridium currently comprises 152 validly described species in Nomenclature.[1] However, on the basis of 16S rRNA gene sequence analyses, only 73 of these validly described species fall within the radiation of the type species of the genus Clostridium.

References