Publication | Open Access
Biochemical characteristics and virulence of environmental group F bacteria isolated in the United States
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Citations
15
References
1980
Year
BiologyMicrobial SystematicsPathogenic MicrobiologyMedicineBiochemical CharacteristicsVirulence FactorBacteriologyMicrobial EcologyAeromonas HydrophilaEnvironmental MicrobiologyMicrobiologyNew SpeciesEvolutionary MicrobiologyEnvironmental Group FUnited StatesClinical MicrobiologyAeromonas Spp
Bacteria phenotypically resembling Aeromonas hydrophila, but requiring NaCl for growth, have been isolated form the New York Bight. The bacteria proved to be identical to group F organisms isolated from cases of human diarrhea in Indonesia and Bangladesh. Anaerogenic strains initiated responses in Y-1 tissue culture and rabbit ileal loop, consistent with those associated with cytotoxin- and enterotoxin-producing Aeromonas spp. strains. Separation on the basis of production of gas from glucose by group F strains was correlated with differences in mean guanine-plus-cytosine deoxyribonucleic acid base composition and in deoxyribonucleic acid relative reassociation. Both aerogenic and anaerogenic strains reassociated to a significantly greater extent with Vibrio spp. than with Aeromonas spp. and indeed should be considered a new species of the genus Vibrio.
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