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Microbiol. Rev., 06 1996, 407-438, Vol 60, No. 2
P Vandamme, B Pot, M Gillis, P de Vos, K Kersters and J Swings
Over the last 25 years, a much broader range of taxonomic studies of
bacteria has gradually replaced the former reliance upon morphological,
physiological, and biochemical characterization. This polyphasic taxonomy
takes into account all available phenotypic and genotypic data and
integrates them in a consensus type of classification, framed in a general
phylogeny derived from 16S rRNA sequence analysis. In some cases, the
consensus classification is a compromise containing a minimum of
contradictions. It is thought that the more parameters that will become
available in the future, the more polyphasic classification will gain
stability. In this review, the practice of polyphasic taxonomy is discussed
for four groups of bacteria chosen for their relevance, complexity, or
both: the genera Xanthomonas and Campylobacter, the lactic acid bacteria,
and the family Comamonadaceae. An evaluation of our present insights, the
conclusions derived from it, and the perspectives of polyphasic taxonomy
are discussed, emphasizing the keystone role of the species. Taxonomists
did not succeed in standardizing species delimitation by using percent DNA
hybridization values. Together with the absence of another "gold standard"
for species definition, this has an enormous repercussion on bacterial
taxonomy. This problem is faced in polyphasic taxonomy, which does not
depend on a theory, a hypothesis, or a set of rules, presenting a pragmatic
approach to a consensus type of taxonomy, integrating all available data
maximally. In the future, polyphasic taxonomy will have to cope with (i)
enormous amounts of data, (ii) large numbers of strains, and (iii) data
fusion (data aggregation), which will demand efficient and centralized data
storage. In the future, taxonomic studies will require collaborative
efforts by specialized laboratories even more than now is the case. Whether
these future developments will guarantee a more stable consensus
classification remains an open question.
Copyright © 1996, American Society for Microbiology
Polyphasic taxonomy, a consensus approach to bacterial systematics
Laboratorium voor Microbiologie, Universiteit Gent, Belgium.
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