Draft genome of Mn(II)-oxidizing bacterium Hydrogenophaga sp. ZJX-1 isolated from coastal sediments in Liaoning, China
Yu Liu, Fei Li, Jiaxi Zang, Hao Zhou

TL;DR
Scientists sequenced the genome of a bacteria that can oxidize manganese, found in coastal sediments in China.
Contribution
The study provides a draft genome of a Mn(II)-oxidizing bacterium and suggests its role in carbon and nitrogen cycles.
Findings
The draft genome is 5,014,722 bp long with a G+C content of 65.94%.
Genome annotation indicates a link between Mn(II) oxidation and carbon/nitrogen cycling.
Abstract
The draft genome sequence of Hydrogenophaga sp. ZJX-1, a Mn(II)-oxidizing bacterium isolated from coastal sediments of Liaodong Bay, China, consists of 5,014,722 bp with a G+C content of 65.94% and an N50 of 671,809 bp. Genome annotation suggests a potential coupling between Mn(II)-oxidation and carbon/nitrogen cycling.
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsGeochemistry and Elemental Analysis · Microbial Fuel Cells and Bioremediation · Chromium effects and bioremediation
