-- dump date 20140619_000029 -- class Genbank::Contig -- table contig_comment -- id comment NC_010180.1 PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to finalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.govPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei SorokinPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-StanfordPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data toPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of thisPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborativePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes:PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identifiedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newlyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 isPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many otherPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name BacillusPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be consideredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000904. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species. COMPLETENESS: full length. NC_010181.1 PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to finalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.govPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei SorokinPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-StanfordPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data toPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of thisPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborativePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes:PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identifiedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newlyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 isPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many otherPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name BacillusPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be consideredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000905. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species. COMPLETENESS: full length. NC_010182.1 PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to finalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.govPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei SorokinPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-StanfordPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data toPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of thisPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborativePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes:PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identifiedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newlyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 isPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many otherPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name BacillusPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be consideredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000906. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species. COMPLETENESS: full length. NC_010183.1 PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to finalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.govPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei SorokinPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-StanfordPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data toPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of thisPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborativePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes:PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identifiedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newlyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 isPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many otherPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name BacillusPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be consideredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000907. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species. COMPLETENESS: full length. NC_010184.1 PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to finalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.govPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei SorokinPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-StanfordPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGFPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data toPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of thisPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborativePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376)PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes:PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identifiedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of thePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strainsPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newlyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al,PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 isPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many otherPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name BacillusPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be consideredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000903. URL -- http://www.jgi.doe.gov JGI Project ID: 4000415 Source DNA and bacteria available from Alexei Sorokin (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Contacts: Alexei Sorokine (alexei.sorokine@jouy.inra.fr) Paul Richardson (microbes@cuba.jgi-psf.org) Quality assurance done by JGI-Stanford Annotation done by JGI-ORNL and JGI-PGF Finishing done by JGI-PGF The JGI and collaborators endorse the principles for the distribution and use of large scale sequencing data adopted by the larger genome sequencing community and urge users of this data to follow them. It is our intention to publish the work of this project in a timely fashion and we welcome collaborative interaction on the project and analysis. (http://www.genome.gov/page.cfm?pageID=10506376) Notes: Bacillus weihenstephanensis KBAB4 was originally isolated from forest soil near Versailles, France, and was originally identified as Bacillus cereus (Vilas-Boas et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2002, 68, 1414). More detailed phylogenetic analysis, using MLST, of the Versailles Collection of B. cereus and B. thuringiensis strains revealed that the strain grows at low temperature (6oC) and clusters with many other strains able to grow at low temperatures, including the independently isolated and characterized strains WSBC10204 and WSBC10206 (Sorokin et al, Appl Env Microbiol, 2006, 72, 1569). The latter two strains are the type strains of a newly recognized species in the B. cereus group able to grow in cold and having the species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis (Lechner et al, Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol, 1998, 48, 1373). Since, by MLST, KBAB4 is very closely related to WSBC10204 and represents many other psychrotrophic strains, it was assigned a species name Bacillus weihenstephanensis and the strain KBAB4 should also be considered as a type representative of this species. COMPLETENESS: full length.