Proteobacteria

Proteobacteria

Scientific classification
Kingdom:Bacteria
Phylum:Proteobacteria
Orders
Alpha Proteobacteria
  • Caulobacterales - Caulobacteraceae
  • Parvularculales - Parvularculaceae
  • Rhizobiales - Rhizobacteria
  • Rhodobacterales - Rhodobacteraceae
  • Rhodospirillales
    • Acetobacteraceae - Acetic acid bacteria
    • Rhodospirillaceae - Purple nonsulfur bacteria
  • Rickettsiales - Rickettsias
  • Sphingomonadales - Sphingomonadaceae

Beta Proteobacteria
  • Burkholderiales
  • Hydrogenophilales - Hydrogenophilaceae
  • Methylophilales - Methylophilaceae
  • Neisseriales - Neisseriaceae
  • Nitrosomonadales
    • Gallionellaceae - Iron bacteria
    • Nitrosomonadaceae
    • Spirillaceae
  • Procabacteriales - Procabacteriaceae
  • Rhodocyclales - Rhodocyclaceae

Gamma Proteobacteria
  • Acidithiobacillales
  • Aeromonadales
  • Alteromonadales
  • Cardiobacteriales - Cardiobacteriaceae
  • Chromatiales
    • Chromatiaceae - Purple sulfur bacteria
    • Ectothiorhodospiraceae - Purple sulfur bacteria
    • Halothiobacillaceae
  • Enterobacteriales
  • Legionellales
  • Methylococcales - Methylococcaceae
  • Oceanospirillales
  • Pasteurellales - Pasteurellaceae
  • Pseudomonadales
  • Thiotrichales
  • Vibrionales - Vibrionaceae
  • Xanthomonadales - Xanthomonadaceae

Delta Proteobacteria
  • Bdellovibrionales - Bdellovibrionaceae
  • Desulfobacterales
  • Desulfovibrionales
  • Desulfurellales - Desulfurellaceae
  • Desulfuromonadales
  • Myxococcales - Fruiting gliding bacteria
  • Syntrophobacterales

Epsilon Proteobacteria
  • Campylobacterales
  • Nautiliales - Nautiliaceae

The Proteobacteria are a major group of bacteria, including many important nitrogen fixing bacteria and pathogens. The name comes from the Greek god Proteus, who could change shape, and refers to the great diversity of forms found in this group, which is defined mainly in terms of RNA sequences. Proteobacteria have cell walls composed mainly of lipopolysaccharides, giving them gram-negative stains. Many have flagella, while others may move about through bacterial gliding. Most are anaerobic. Some, called purple bacteria, are capable of photosynthesis, which uses hydrogen sulfide, sulfur, or hydrogen as an electron donor, and so does not produce oxygen.

The proteobacteria are divided into five major groups, sometimes treated as classes, which are labelled with the Greek letters alpha through epsilon. Some of these may be paraphyletic. The mitochondria found in eukaryotic cells may represent reduced endosymbiotic alpha-proteobacteria as well.






Google
Home   Alphabetical Listing   Quote


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.