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. 2016 Aug 30;82(18):5482–5495. doi: 10.1128/AEM.01375-16

FIG 2.

FIG 2

The percentages (A) and a neighbor-joining (NJ) phylogenetic tree (B) based on 16S rRNA gene sequences of the published Sb(III)-oxidizing strains. The Pseudomonas spp. include 22 Sb(III)-oxidizing strains (DA2, DC5, DF12, DF11, DA5, DF3, DF9, DC8, DC7, DS4, DF7, TC13, JC11, DS7, DF8, DF5, DA4, NL6, IK-S1, NL10, NL2, and NL5). The Acinetobacter spp. include seven Sb(III)-oxidizing strains (DC2, LH3, LH4, JL7, DS2, NL1, and NL12). The Comamonas spp. include 10 Sb(III)-oxidizing strains (JL25, JL40, DF1, DS1, DF2, JL13, JL12, JC9, S44, and NL11). The Agrobacterium spp. include eight Sb(III)-oxidizing strains (C58, 5A, GW4, C13, LY4, TS43, TS45, and D14) (see Table S1 in the supplemental material). Among these, the Sb(III) oxidation capabilities of six Agrobacterium (strains C58, C13, LY4, TS43, TS45, and D14) and Sinorhizobium sp. GW3 are unpublished. All of the type strains are used for taxonomic determination without knowing their Sb(III) oxidation abilities. Bootstrap values (>50%) are shown at nodes as percentages of 1,000 replicates. Bar, 0.02 substitutions per nucleotide position.