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  • Enterobacter hormaechei sub...
    Sutton, Granger G.; Brinkac, Lauren M.; Clarke, Thomas H.; Fouts, Derrick E.

    F1000 research, 2018, Volume: 7
    Journal Article

    Background: The predominant species in clinical Enterobacter isolates is E. hormaechei . Many articles, clinicians, and GenBank submissions misname these strains as E. cloacae . The lack of sequenced type strains or named species/subspecies for some clades in the E. cloacae complex complicate the issue. Methods: The genomes of the type strains for Enterobacter hormaechei  subsp.  oharae , E .  hormaechei subsp.  steigerwaltii , and E. xiangfangensis , and two strains from Hoffmann clusters III and IV of the E. cloacae complex were sequenced. These genomes, the E .  hormaechei  subsp.  hormaechei type strain, and other available Enterobacter type strains were analysed in conjunction with all extant Enterobacter genomes in NCBI’s RefSeq using Average Nucleotide Identity (ANI). Results: There were five recognizable subspecies of E. hormaechei : E. hormaechei subsp. hoffmannii subsp. nov., E. hormaechei subsp. xiangfangensis comb. nov., and the three previously known subspecies. One of the strains sequenced from the E. cloacae complex was not a novel E. hormaechei subspecies but rather a member of a clade of a novel species: E. roggenkampii sp. nov.. E. muelleri was determined to be a later heterotypic synonym of E. asburiae which should take precedence. Conclusion: The phylogeny of the Enterobacter genus, particularly the cloacae complex, was re-evaluated based on the type strain genome sequences and all other available Enterobacter genomes in RefSeq.