Characterization of Haemophilus vaginalis, Corynebacterium cervicis, and related bacteria

1969 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 587-594 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janice M. Vickerstaff ◽  
Barry C. Cole

The genital tract bacteria, previously classified as Haemophilus vaginalis and Corynebacterium cervicis and their suggested variant forms, have been characterized by morphology, physiology, and cell wall composition. The strains of H. vaginalis did not form a homogeneous taxonomic group. Only the Dingham strain of Amies and Jones and a Gram-negative culture of strain GP2 of Edmunds were related to the genus Haemophilus. H. vaginalis strain GP7 and the Gram-positive culture of GP2 were corynebacteria. The remaining strains of H. vaginalis were distinct from each other and from the Haemophilus group. None of the strains of C. cervicis could be identified with the genus Corynebacterium. The O strains of C. cervicis were related to the genus Haemophilus, whereas the T strains of C. cervicis and the NCTC strain of H. vaginalis (10287) shared properties with Actinomyces bovis. The two diphtheroids D5 and D17 from a culture of Mycoplasma hominis type 2 (Mycoplasma arthritidis) were dissimilar to each other; D17 was a typical Corynebacterium, whereas D5 was unrelated to the corynebacteria, but similar to the T strains of C. cervicis.

2016 ◽  
Vol 64 (45) ◽  
pp. 8625-8632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Judith Schäfer ◽  
Anika Brett ◽  
Bernhard Trierweiler ◽  
Mirko Bunzel

2006 ◽  
Vol 72 (10) ◽  
pp. 6483-6492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jürgen Behr ◽  
Michael G. Gänzle ◽  
Rudi F. Vogel

ABSTRACT Resistance to hops is a prerequisite for lactic acid bacteria to spoil beer. In this study we analyzed mechanisms of hop resistance of Lactobacillus brevis at the metabolism, membrane physiology, and cell wall composition levels. The beer-spoiling organism L. brevis TMW 1.465 was adapted to high concentrations of hop compounds and compared to a nonadapted strain. Upon adaptation to hops the metabolism changed to minimize ethanol stress. Fructose was used predominantly as a carbon source by the nonadapted strain but served as an electron acceptor upon adaptation to hops, with concomitant formation of acetate instead of ethanol. Furthermore, hop adaptation resulted in higher levels of lipoteichoic acids (LTA) incorporated into the cell wall and altered composition and fluidity of the cytoplasmic membrane. The putative transport protein HitA and enzymes of the arginine deiminase pathway were overexpressed upon hop adaptation. HorA was not expressed, and the transport of hop compounds from the membrane to the extracellular space did not account for increased resistance to hops upon adaptation. Accordingly, hop resistance is a multifactorial dynamic property, which can develop during adaptation. During hop adaptation, arginine catabolism contributes to energy and generation of the proton motive force until a small fraction of the population has established structural improvements. This acquired hop resistance is energy independent and involves an altered cell wall composition. LTA shields the organism from accompanying stresses and provides a reservoir of divalent cations, which are otherwise scarce as a result of their complexation by hop acids. Some of the mechanisms involved in hop resistance overlap with mechanisms of pH resistance and ethanol tolerance and as a result enable beer spoilage by L. brevis.


1980 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 556-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. J. Merkel ◽  
D. R. Durham ◽  
J. J. Perry

The cell wall of Thermomicrobium roseum, a Gram-negative, obligately thermophilic bacterium, has a composition unlike other Gram-negative thermophilic organisms. The purified cell wall was composed predominantly of a protein with a monomeric molecular weight of 75 000. The amino acid composition of this protein revealed high concentrations of proline, glutamic acid, glycine, and alanine.


1975 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 2039-2047 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. F. Winter ◽  
E. A. Delwiche

The cell wall of Veillonella alcalescens was shown to have a typically Gram-negative appearance and composition. The wall contains 24% lipid, 0.8% phosphorus, and 6.8% hexosamine. It is estimated to contain about 5% murein, unlike the 24% reported by other for Veillonella parvula. The amounts of 19 amino acids, including diaminopimelic acid, were determined. Though Veillonella sp. cannot metabolize sugars for energy, V. alcalescens incorporates ribose and fructose by separate, specific mechanisms and uses most of the incorporated sugar in nucleic acid synthesis. Large excesses of either sugar in the medium do not repress gluconeogenesis from the pyruvate level. We have been unable to detect phosphoglyceromutase (EC 2.7.5.3) by several assay methods but have no indication of a gluconeogenic pathway other than reverse glycolysis.


mBio ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Coralie Fumeaux ◽  
Thomas G. Bernhardt

ABSTRACT Peptidoglycan (PG) is an essential cross-linked polymer that surrounds most bacterial cells to prevent osmotic rupture of the cytoplasmic membrane. Its synthesis relies on penicillin-binding proteins, the targets of beta-lactam antibiotics. Many Gram-negative bacteria, including the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, are resistant to beta-lactams because of a chromosomally encoded beta-lactamase called AmpC. In P. aeruginosa, expression of the ampC gene is tightly regulated and its induction is linked to cell wall stress. We reasoned that a reporter gene fusion to the ampC promoter would allow us to identify mutants defective in maintaining cell wall homeostasis and thereby uncover new factors involved in the process. A library of transposon-mutagenized P. aeruginosa was therefore screened for mutants with elevated ampC promoter activity. As an indication that the screen was working as expected, mutants with transposons disrupting the dacB gene were isolated. Defects in DacB have previously been implicated in ampC induction and clinical resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics. The screen also uncovered murU and PA3172 mutants that, upon further characterization, displayed nearly identical drug resistance and sensitivity profiles. We present genetic evidence that PA3172, renamed mupP, encodes the missing phosphatase predicted to function in the MurU PG recycling pathway that is widely distributed among Gram-negative bacteria. IMPORTANCE The cell wall biogenesis pathway is the target of many of our best antibiotics, including penicillin and related beta-lactam drugs. Resistance to these therapies is on the rise, particularly among Gram-negative species like Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a problematic opportunistic pathogen. To better understand how these organisms resist cell wall-targeting antibiotics, we screened for P. aeruginosa mutants defective in maintaining cell wall homeostasis. The screen identified a new factor, called MupP, involved in the recycling of cell wall turnover products. Characterization of MupP and other components of the pathway revealed that cell wall recycling plays important roles in both the resistance and the sensitivity of P. aeruginosa to cell wall-targeting antibiotics. IMPORTANCE The cell wall biogenesis pathway is the target of many of our best antibiotics, including penicillin and related beta-lactam drugs. Resistance to these therapies is on the rise, particularly among Gram-negative species like Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a problematic opportunistic pathogen. To better understand how these organisms resist cell wall-targeting antibiotics, we screened for P. aeruginosa mutants defective in maintaining cell wall homeostasis. The screen identified a new factor, called MupP, involved in the recycling of cell wall turnover products. Characterization of MupP and other components of the pathway revealed that cell wall recycling plays important roles in both the resistance and the sensitivity of P. aeruginosa to cell wall-targeting antibiotics.


Author(s):  
B.K. Ghosh

Periplasm of bacteria is the space outside the permeability barrier of plasma membrane but enclosed by the cell wall. The contents of this special milieu exterior could be regulated by the plasma membrane from the internal, and by the cell wall from the external environment of the cell. Unlike the gram-negative organism, the presence of this space in gram-positive bacteria is still controversial because it cannot be clearly demonstrated. We have shown the importance of some periplasmic bodies in the secretion of penicillinase from Bacillus licheniformis.In negatively stained specimens prepared by a modified technique (Figs. 1 and 2), periplasmic space (PS) contained two kinds of structures: (i) fibrils (F, 100 Å) running perpendicular to the cell wall from the protoplast and (ii) an array of vesicles of various sizes (V), which seem to have evaginated from the protoplast.


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