Mycoplasma procyoni
(Volokhov et al., 2019)
Etymology
Gr. n. mukes – fungus, Gr. neut. n. plasma – anything formed, N.L. neut. n. Mycoplasma – fungus form; L. n. procyon – genus name of the racoon, L. gen. n. procyoni – of a racoon
Taxonomy
Mycoplasmatales – Mycoplasmataceae – Mycoplasma – Mycoplasma procyoni (Hyopneumoniae cluster), related to Mycoplasma lagogentialium (16S rRNA gene sequence similarity – 96.98%) (Fig. 1)
Type strain
LR5794T (racoon – Procyon lotor, Canada, 2005?), (Fig. 2, 16S rRNA gene sequence)
Genomes
one draft genome (LR5784T – Canada) (NCBI Genome deposit per 11/05/2024)
Cell morphology
spherical – coccoid
Colony morphology
fried egg morphology (Fig. 3)
Metabolism
fermentation of glucose; non-arginine hydrolyzing, non-urea-hydrolyzing
Host
racoon (Procyon lotor)
Habitat
oral cavity
Disease(s)
unknown, no disease reported
Pathogenicity
factors unknown
Epidemiology
unknown, once isolated from the oral cavity of a racoon from Canada
Diagnosis
cultivation and species identification by MALDI-ToF MS or genetically
Fig. 1. Maximum likelihood tree showing the phylogenetic positions of Mycoplasma procyoni LR5794T within the Hyopneumoniae cluster of Mycoplasmataceae based on 16S rRNA gene sequences. The sequence of Mycoplasma synoviae WVU 1853T was used as out-group (Synoviae cluster). Numbers at nodes represent bootstrap confidence values (1000 replications). Only values > 80% are shown. Bar, number of substitutions per nucleotide position. Credits: Joachim Spergser (Vetmeduni Vienna)
TTAACGCTGGCTGTGTGCCTAATACATGCATGTTGAACGAAGCAGTGCTTGCACTGACTTAGTAGCGAATGGGTGAGTAACACGTACCTAACCTACCTTTTAGATTGGGATAACTACTGGAAACAGTAGCTAATACCGAATACGAATTTCTGTCGCATGATGGAAGTTTAAAAGGAGCCTCAAAGCTTCACTTAAAGATGGGGGTGCGGAACATTAGCTAGTTGGTAGGGTAATGGCCTACCAAGGCGATGATGTTTAGCCGGGCCGAGAGGCTGTACGGCCACACTGGGACTGAGATACGGCCCAGACTCCTACGGGAGGCAGCAGTAGGGAATTTTCCACAATGAGCGAAAGCTTGATGGAGCGACACAGCGTGCAGGATGAAGGCCTTCGGGTTGTAAACTGCTGTTGCAAGGGAAGAAAAAATAGGGTAGGAAATGAYCCTTAATTGACGGTACCTTGTTAGAAAGCGATGGCAAACTATGTGCCAGCAGCCGCGGTAATACATAGGTCGCGAGCGTTATCCGGAATTATTGGGCGTAAAGAGTTCGTAGGTTGTTTGTTAAGTCTGGAGTTAAATACCGAAGCTCAACTTCGGCCCGCTTTAGATACTGGCAAGCTAGAATTACAAAGAGGTTAGCGGAATTCCTAGTGAAGCGGTGGAATGCGTAGATATTAGGAAGAACACCAATAGGCGAAGGCAGCTAACTGGTTGTATATTGACACTGAGGAACGAAAGCGTGGGGAGCAAACAGGATTAGATACCCTGGTAGTCCACGCCGTAAACGTTGATCATTAGTTGGTAGGAAGACTTACCGATGCAGCTAACGCAGTAAATGATCCGCCTGAGTAGTATGCTCGCAAGAGTGAAACTTAAAGGAATTGACGGGGACCCGCACAAGCGGAGGAGCATGTGGTTTAATTTGAAGATACGCGTAGAACCTTACCCACTCTTGACATCCCTTGCAATGCTATAGAGATATAGCGGAGGTTAACAAGGTGACAGATGGTGCATGGTTGTCGTCAGCTCGTGTCGTGAGATGTTAGGTTAAGTCCTGCAACGAGCGCAACCCTTGTCTTTAGTTACTAACATTTAGTTGAGGACTCTAGAGAGACTGCCTGGGTAACCAGGAGGAAGGTGGGGACGACGTCAAATCATCATGCCTCTTACGAGTGGGGCAACACACGTGCTACAATGGTTGGTACAAAGAGAAGCAATATGGTGACATGGAGCAAACCTCAAAAAACCAATCTCAGTTCGGATTGAAGTCTGCAACTCGACTTCATGAAGTCGGATTCGCTAGTAATCGCAGATCAGCTACGCTGCGGTGAATACGTTCTCGGGTCTTGTACACACCGCCCGTCACACCATGGGAGTTGGTAATGCCCGAAGCCGGTTAGTTAACTTCGGAGACGACTGTCTAAGGCAGGACCGATGACTGGGGTGAAGTCGTAACAAGGT
Fig. 2. 16S rRNA gene sequence of Mycoplasma procyoni LR5794T (Accession number: FJ226566)Fig. 3. Colonies of Mycoplasma procyoni LR5794T on modified Hayflick’s agar after 4 days of incubation exhibiting fried egg morphology. Bar, 1 mm. Credits: Joachim Spergser (Vetmeduni Vienna)