-- dump date 20140619_041948 -- class Genbank::Contig -- table contig_comment -- id comment NC_009792.1 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 CP000822.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of manPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They canPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They canPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly inPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell etPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein).PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDCPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa CampbellPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type CulturePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic StockPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, usingPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate ofPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of MichaelPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of AllergyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of HealthPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) databasePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genesPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequencePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions werePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or coveredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt wasPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than onePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than one m13 subclone.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000822. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than one m13 subclone. COMPLETENESS: full length. NC_009793.1 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 CP000823.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of manPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They canPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They canPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly inPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell etPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein).PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDCPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa CampbellPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type CulturePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic StockPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, usingPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate ofPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of MichaelPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of AllergyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of HealthPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) databasePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genesPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequencePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions werePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or coveredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt wasPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than onePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than one m13 subclone.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000823. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than one m13 subclone. COMPLETENESS: full length. NC_009794.1 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 CP000824.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated fromPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of manPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They canPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They canPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly inPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell etPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein).PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDCPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatalPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa CampbellPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type CulturePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic StockPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, usingPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate ofPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performedPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of MichaelPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of AllergyPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of HealthPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) databasePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genesPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequencePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions werePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or coveredPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt wasPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions andPROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than onePROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than one m13 subclone.PROVISIONAL REFSEQ: This record has not yet been subject to final NCBI review. The reference sequence was derived from CP000824. Citrobacter (diversus) koseri--Citrobacter cells are isolated from water, sewage, soils, and food, as well as from the feces of man and other animals, where they may be normal inhabitants. They can be found in urine, sputum, and other clinical specimens. They can sometimes be opportunistic pathogens particularly in immunocompromised patients in hospitals or in infants (Pepperell et al., Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2002 Nov;46(11):3555-60. and references therein). The strain of Citrobacter koseri being sequenced, strain CDC 4225-83, was isolated in 1983 in Maryland, where it caused neonatal meningitis. It was provided by Caroline Mohr and Melissa Campbell of CDC. The strain is available from the American Type Culture Collection as ATCC BAA-895 or from the Salmonella Genetic Stock Centre as SGSC4696. The genome was sequenced to 8X coverage, using plasmid and fosmid libraries and was finished to an error rate of less than 1 per 10,000 bases. Automated annotation was performed and manual annotation will continue in the labs of Michael McClelland and Kenneth Sanderson. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), National Institutes of Health (NIH) has funded this project. Coding sequences below are predicted using GeneMark v3.3 and Glimmer2 v2.13.Intergenic regions not spanned by GeneMark and Glimmer2 were blasted against NCBI's non-redundant (NR) database and predictions generated based on protein alignments. RNA genes were determined usingtRNAscan-SE 1.23 or Rfam v8.0. This sequence was finished as follows unless otherwise noted: all regions were double stranded, sequenced with an alternate chemistries or covered by high quality data (i.e., phred quality >=30); an attempt was made to resolve all sequencing problems, such as compressions and repeats; all regions were covered by sequence from more than one m13 subclone. COMPLETENESS: full length.