Affiliation:
1. Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Shreveport, Louisiana 71130-3932
2. University of South Alabama, Biology Department, Mobile, Alabama
3. University of Michigan, Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Ann Arbor, Michigan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The growth of the gastric pathogen
Helicobacter pylori
in the absence of serum remains challenging, and nutritional requirements have only partially been defined, while almost nothing is known about nutritional requirements of other
Helicobacter
spp. Although previous data showed that
H. pylori
grows in the chemically defined medium F-12, but not in other tissue culture media examined, the specific components responsible for growth were not entirely understood. Here we describe the optimization of amino acids, metals, and sodium chloride for
H. pylori
. Iron, zinc, and magnesium were critical for growth; copper was not required. Optimization of sodium chloride was further beneficial. Nutritional requirements and antibiotic resistance patterns of several other
Helicobacter
spp. revealed that all except
H. felis
grew in serum-free, unsupplemented F-12. All
Helicobacter
spp. were resistant to at least six antimicrobial agents when cultured in the presence of serum. However, in the absence of serum,
H. pylori
,
H. mustelae
, and
H. muridarum
became sensitive to polymyxin B and/or trimethoprim. Much of the data were obtained using a convenient ATP assay to quantify growth.
H. pylori
has surprisingly few absolute requirements for growth: 9 amino acids, sodium and potassium chloride, thiamine, iron, zinc, magnesium, hypoxanthine, and pyruvate. These data suggest that
H. pylori
and other
Helicobacter
spp. are not as fastidious as previously thought. The data also suggest that chemically defined media described herein could yield the growth of a wide range of
Helicobacter
spp., allowing a more detailed characterization of
Helicobacter
physiology and interactions with host cells.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
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