Affiliation:
1. Division of Bacterial and Mycotic Diseases, Centers for Disease Control, Atlanta, Georgia 30333.
Abstract
On the basis of phenotypic characterization and DNA relatedness determinations, the genus Afipia gen. nov., which contains six species, is described. The type species is Afipia felis sp. nov. (the cat scratch disease bacillus). Afipia clevelandensis sp. nov., Afipia broomeae sp. nov., and three unnamed not associated with cat-borne disease. All but one strain (Afipia genospecies 3) were isolated from human wound and respiratory sources. All Afipia species are gram-negative, oxidase-positive, nonfermentative rods in the alpha-2 subgroup of the class Proteobacteria. They are motile by means of a single flagellum. They grow on buffered charcoal-yeast extract agar and nutrient broth, but rarely on MacConkey agar, at 25 and 30 degrees C. They are urease positive; but they are negative in reactions for hemolysis, indole production, H2S production (triple sugar iron agar), gelatin hydrolysis, esculin hydrolysis, and peptonization of litmus milk. They do not produce acid oxidatively from D-glucose, lactose, maltose, or sucrose. The major cell wall fatty acids are 11-methyloctadec-12-enoic (CBr19:1), cis-octadec-11-enoic (C18:1omega7c), and generally, 9,10-methylenehexadecanote and 11,12-methyleneoctadecanoate; and there are only trace amounts of hydroxy acids. The guanineplus-cytosine content is 61.5 to 69 mol%. A. felis is positive for nitrate reduction and is delayed positive for acid production from D-xylose, but it is catalase negative. A. clevelandensis is negative in all of these tests. A. broomeae is weakly positive for catalase production and acid production from D-xylose, but it is negative for nitrate reduction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Reference34 articles.
1. Comparison of four typing methods for Aeromonas species;Altwegg M.;J. Diarrhoeal Dis. Res.,1988
2. A rapid alkaline extraction procedure for screening recombinant plasmid DNA;Birnboim H. C.;Nucleic Acids Res.,1979
3. Escherichia vulneris: a new species of Enterobacteriaceae associated with human wounds;Brenner D. J.;J. Clin. Microbiol.,1982
4. Centers for Disease Control. Unpublished data.
5. Detection of Legionnaires' disease bacteria by direct immunofluorescent staining;Cherry W. B.;J. Clin. Microbiol.,1978
Cited by
180 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献