Affiliation:
1. R. M. Alden Research Laboratory, Santa Monica, California 90404
2. UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90095
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Seventeen
human clinical isolates representing four species of
Desulfovibrio
were characterized using 16S rRNA gene sequences
and tests for catalase, indole, nitrate, bile, urease, formate-fumarate
stimulation, desulfoviridin, motility, and hydrogen sulfide production,
plus susceptibility to antimicrobial agents. Eighty
additional strains representing 10 phenotypically similar genera
(
Bilophila
,
Selenomonas
,
Capnocytophaga
,
Campylobacter
,
Bacteroides
,
Sutterella
,
Anaerobiospirillum
,
Dialister
,
Veillonella
,
and
Mobiluncus
) were included for comparison. All
Desulfovibrio
species produced H
2
S and were
desulfoviridin positive, and all
Desulfovibrio
species except
D. piger
were motile. The four
Desulfovibrio
species could be distinguished from each other using tests for
catalase, indole, nitrate, urease, and growth on bile, with the
following results (positive [+], negative [−], growth
[G], and no growth [NG]): for
D. piger
, −,−
, −, −, and G, respectively; for
D
.
fairfieldensis
, +, −, +, −,
and G, respectively; for
D. desulfuricans
, −,−
, +, +, and NG, respectively; and for
D. vulgaris
, −, +, −,−
, and G, respectively. Resistance to the 10-μg
colistin disk separated the
Desulfovibrio
species from most of
the other genera, which were usually susceptible. These simple tests
were useful for characterizing the
Desulfovibrio
species and
differentiating them from other phenotypically similar
genera.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology