Author:
Rahi Praveen,Rodrigues Carla,Brisse Sylvain
Abstract
Abstract
Klebs.i.el' la
. N.L. fem. dim. n.
Klebsiella
, named after Edwin Klebs (1834–1913), a German bacteriologist.
Pseudomonadota / Gammaproteobacteria / Enterobacterales / Enterobacteriaceae / Klebsiella
Cells are Gram‐stain‐negative straight rods (0.3–1.0 × 0.6–6.0 μm), mostly nonmotile (except
K. aerogenes
), and are capsulated. Grow on a variety of growth media including meat extract media (except
K. granulomatis
, which has not been cultured). Colonies are smooth, circular, more or less dome shaped, and glistening of varying degrees of stickiness, depending on the strain and the composition of the medium.
Klebsiella
are cytochrome oxidase‐negative, mesophilic, and facultatively anaerobic, having both a respiratory and a fermentative type of metabolism. The majority of
Klebsiella
fail to grow at 10 and 45°C, while the type strains of
K. oxytoca
,
K. planticola
,
K. terrigena
,
K. ornithinolytica
,
K. michiganensis
, and
K. variicola
show growth at 10°C.
Klebsiella
are usually positive for Voges–Proskauer test, except strains of
K. spallanzanii
,
K. indica
, and
K. huaxiensis
. Most
Klebsiella
members hydrolyze urea. Based on genomic sequence‐based phylogenetic analyses,
Klebsiella
species form higher‐level groups, called the
K. pneumoniae
species complex (KpSC),
K. oxytoca
species complex (KoSC), and
K. planticola
species complex (KplanSC). Additional species complexes may be defined in the future to accommodate other species such as
K. aerogenes
,
K. terrigena
, and
K. indica
. Some
Klebsiella
strains fix atmospheric nitrogen. Members of
Klebsiella
are considered ubiquitous and have been isolated from diverse sources including clinical specimens from humans and animals (e.g., cows, horses, and swine, monkeys), the mammalian gut, household items, soil, water, and plants. All
Klebsiella
species are considered opportunistic pathogens, except for a few specific pathovars, and may harbor a variety of antimicrobial resistance genes. Some strains of the KpSC, called hypervirulent strains, and some toxigenic strains of the KoSC are considered true pathogens.
DNA G + C content (mol%)
: 53–58 (
T
m
).
Type species
:
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Trevisan 1887
AL
(basonym:
Hyalococcus pneumoniae
Schroeter 1886).