What has happened?
If you go to site 652, you'll notice that the isolate sequence is shifted one to the left in comparison to the alleles. This has lead to the stop codon at 652 being in frame, and knocked the original stop codon out of frame. If you look further upstream you can find that a base has been lost around site 426, shown by the black box. This single base deletion has lead to the frameshift, changing the frame of the following sequence.
What does this mean for a bacterium?
In a bacterium, the protein machinery would stop as soon as it reaches a stop codon. This would be the one at site 652 which is not far from the end so the protein may be of a similar length. However, we need to consider how early in the gene the single base deletion occurred. If it was also around 650 then the protein would likely be functional but as the deletion and frameshift actually occurred around 200 bases earlier, leading to a different sequence of amino acids, it decreases the chance of a functional protein. The only way to determine this would be in vivo testing.
What would a curator do?
A curator would make a new allele and note it has a deletion and frameshift.