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The Thermus thermophilus HB27 genome is 2.13 Million bp long and contains approximately 2263
predicted genes.
The sequence was released 04/06/2004 by the University of Goettingen, and was described
in Nat Biotechnol :547-53 (2004) Henne A, Bruggemann H, Raasch C, Wiezer A, Hartsch T, et al. "The genome sequence of the extreme thermophile Thermus thermophilus.
"
Abstract: Thermus thermophilus HB27 is an extremely thermophilic, halotolerant bacterium, which was originally isolated from a natural thermal environment in Japan. This organism has considerable biotechnological potential; many thermostable proteins isolated from members of the genus Thermus are indispensable in research and in industrial applications. We present here the complete genome sequence of T. thermophilus HB27, the first for the genus Thermus. The genome consists of a 1,894,877 base... [Click above reference link for full abstract]
Taxonomy: Bacteria; DeinococcusThermus; Deinococci; Thermales; Thermaceae; Thermus.
Sequenced related species/strains: Thermus thermophilus HB8
Sample position queries
A genome position can be specified by chromosomal coordinate range, COG
ID, or keywords from the GenBank or TIGR description of a gene.
The available chromosome/plasmid names are:
The following list shows examples of valid position queries for this
genome:
| Request: | Genome Browser Response: |
| chr | Displays the entire sequence "chr" in the browser window |
| chr:1-10000 | Displays first ten thousand bases of the sequence "chr" |
| transporter | Lists all genes with "transporter" in the name or description |
| TTC0010 | Display genome at position of gene TTC0010 |
Credits
The Archaeal Genome Browsers at UCSC were developed by members of the
Lowe Lab (Kevin Schneider,
Katherine Pollard, Andy Pohl, Todd Lowe) and Robert Baertsch, with significant support from
the UCSC Human Genome
Browser group.
The Archaeal Browsers are run by a slightly modified
version of the UCSC Human Genome
Browser system. All queries, bug reports, content corrections, suggested improvements,
and new track data submissions should be sent to Todd Lowe (lowe
@soe.ucsc.edu).
If you use the browser in your published research, please cite our
publication in the Nucleic Acids Research Database
Issue. Citations and positive feedback will help us obtain funding
to continue development of this community resource.
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