What has happened?
Whether you looked from the end of the gene or the site of an internal stop codon, you will notice that the isolate sequence is shifted one to the left. Tracing this upstream, you find it is due to the loss of an A at site 573, shown by the black arrow. This single base deletion has led to a frameshift.
What does this mean for a bacterium?
In a bacterium, the protein machinery would stop once it reaches a stop codon. This would be the first internal stop codon found at site 589. This produces a shorter protein that has different amino acids after the deletion site. We would need to do in vivo tests to confirm, but it is likely its function would be affected and possibly lost.
What would a curator do?
A curator would make a new allele noting that it has a deletion and frameshift.