Taxon DOI
10.1601/tx.4127
Name
Schwiertz et al. 2002 emend. Eeckhaut et al. 2010
Taxonomic Rank
genus
Methodology
Nomenclatural Taxonomy [1980-2022]
Incertae sedis taxa are placed using SOSCC (Garrity and Lilburn 2008)
Parent
Taxon RecordName Record
Rainey 2010
Members
Schwiertz et al. 2002
Hitch et al. 2022
Eeckhaut et al. 2010
Choi et al. 2022
Forster et al. 2022
(Moore et al. 1976) Allen-Vercoe et al. 2013
Lee et al. 2021 non Anaerostipes hominis Liu et al. 2021
Liu et al. 2021 non Anaerostipes hominis Lee et al. 2021
Bui et al. 2014
None 2015
Type Status
Taxonomy
The taxonomic placement of this genus within the root Universal Root.

  Woese et al. 1990
  (None 2015) Woese et al. 1990
  (sic) Gibbons and Murray 2021
  Rainey 2010
  Buchanan 1917 (Approved Lists 1980) emend. Tindall 2019
  Rainey 2010
  Schwiertz et al. 2002 emend. Eeckhaut et al. 2010

The taxonomy from the rank of class and below is based upon currently published taxonomic opinion. For a complete taxonomy, refer to The Taxonomic Outline of Bacteria and Archaea, Release 7.7.
Citation
When referring to this Abstract, please use its Digital Object Identifier.
Taxon Abstract for the genus Anaerostipes Schwiertz et al. 2002 emend. Eeckhaut et al. 2010. Retrieved . https://doi.org/10.1601/tx.4127.
Source File
This information was last reviewed on April 22, 2022.

References


  1. Lee J-Y, Kang W, Shin N-R, Hyun D-W, Kim PS, Kim HS, Lee J-Y, Tak EJ, Sung H, Bae J-W. Anaerostipes hominis sp. nov., a novel butyrate-producing bacteria isolated from faeces of a patient with Crohn's disease. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2021; 71:. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijsem.0.005129 [PubMed].
  2. Bui TPN, de Vos WM, Plugge CM. Anaerostipes rhamnosivorans sp. nov., a human intestinal, butyrate-forming bacterium. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2014; 64:787-793. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.055061-0 [PubMed].
  3. Eeckhaut V, van Immerseel F, Pasmans F, De Brandt E, Haesebrouck F, Ducatelle R, Vandamme P. Anaerostipes butyraticus sp. nov., an anaerobic, butyrate-producing bacterium from Clostridium cluster XIVa isolated from broiler chicken caecal content, and emended description of the genus Anaerostipes. Int J Syst Evol Microbiol 2010; 60:1108-1112. https://doi.org/10.1099/ijs.0.015289-0 [PubMed].
  4. Allen-Vercoe E, Daigneault M, White A, Panaccione R, Duncan SH, Flint HJ, O'Neal L, Lawson PA. Anaerostipes hadrus comb. nov., a dominant species within the human colonic microbiota; reclassification of Eubacterium hadrum Moore et al. 1976. Anaerobe 2012; 18:523-529. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.anaerobe.2012.09.002 [PubMed].
  5. Schwiertz A, Hold GL, Duncan SH, Gruhl B, Collins MD, Lawson PA, Flint HJ, Blaut M. Anaerostipes caccae gen. nov., sp. nov., a new saccharolytic, acetate-utilising, butyrate-producing bacterium from human faeces. Syst Appl Microbiol 2002; 25:46-51. https://doi.org/10.1078/0723-2020-00096 [PubMed].
  6. Hitch TCA, Riedel T, Oren A, Overmann J, Lawley TD, Clavel T. Automated analysis of genomic sequences facilitates high-throughput and comprehensive description of bacteria. ISME Commun 2021; 1:16. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43705-021-00017-z.
  7. Liu C, Du M-X, Abuduaini R, Yu H-Y, Li D-H, Wang Y-J, Zhou N, Jiang M-Z, Niu P-X, Han S-S, Chen H-H, Shi W-Y, Wu L, Xin Y-H, Ma J, Zhou Y, Jiang C-Y, Liu H-W, Liu S-J. Enlightening the taxonomy darkness of human gut microbiomes with a cultured biobank. Microbiome 2021; 9:119-119. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-021-01064-3 [PubMed].
  8. Forster SC, Clare S, Beresford-Jones BS, Harcourt K, Notley G, Stares MD, Kumar N, Soderholm AT, Adoum A, Wong H, Morón B, Brandt C, Dougan G, Adams DJ, Maloy KJ, Pedicord VA, Lawley TD. Identification of gut microbial species linked with disease variability in a widely used mouse model of colitis. Nat Microbiol 2022; 7:590-599. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-022-01094-z [PubMed].
  9. No reference is available 2015
  10. Choi S-H, Choi JY, Park J-E, Kim J-S, Kang SW, Lee J, Lee M-K, Lee J-S, Lee JH, Jung H, Hur T-Y, Kim HB, Lee J-H, Kim J-K, Hong Y, Park S-H. Description of Anaerostipes faecalis sp. nov., a new segmented filamentous bacterium isolated from swine faeces. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek 2021; 114:1867-1875. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10482-021-01646-z [PubMed].