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HERO ID
2983472
Reference Type
Journal Article
Title
Lautropia mirabilis gen. nov., sp. nov., a gram-negative motile coccus with unusual morphology isolated from the human mouth
Author(s)
Gerner-Smidt, P; Keiser-Nielsen, H; Dorsch, M; Stackebrandt, E; Ursing, J; Blom, J; Christensen, AC; Christensen, JJ; Frederiksen, W; Hoffmann, S
Year
1994
Is Peer Reviewed?
1
Journal
Microbiology (Reading, England)
ISSN:
1350-0872
EISSN:
1465-2080
Volume
140 ( Pt 7)
Page Numbers
1787-1797
Language
English
PMID
8075812
DOI
10.1099/13500872-140-7-1787
Web of Science Id
WOS:A1994NY27400032
Abstract
An organism that seems to be identical to Orskov's 'Sarcina mirabilis' [Orskov, J. (1930) Acta Pathol Microbiol Scand Suppl III, 519-541] has been rediscovered in specimens from the upper respiratory tract of humans. Six strains were studied, and the results, which conformed to Orskov's description of S. mirabilis, were as follows. Rough to smooth colonies grow on many plated media and show extremely polymorphic cell morphology with round cells with diameters from 1 to > 10 microns. The smallest cells were often motile with circular movements. Strains were Gram-negative, facultatively anaerobic, oxidase and urease positive, and weakly catalase positive. Nitrate and nitrite were reduced, and glucose, fructose, sucrose and mannitol were fermented. Polysaccharide was produced on sucrose agar. Electron microscopy showed coccoid cells with a bundle of three to nine flagella, a Gram-negative cell-wall morphology, and aggregates of irregular cells held together by a common surface layer. The mean mol% (G+C) of the organisms was 65.0. 16S-ribosomal RNA sequencing revealed that the organism belongs to the beta subgroup of Proteobacteria, separate from all other described genera, but most closely related to Burkholderia. The name Lautropia mirabilis is proposed for this organism.
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Nitrate/Nitrite
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