Number of the records: 1  

Staphylococcus microti sp. nov., isolated from the common vole (Microtus arvalis)

  1. 1.
    SYSNO ASEP0342543
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve WOS
    TitleStaphylococcus microti sp. nov., isolated from the common vole (Microtus arvalis)
    Author(s) Nováková, D. (CZ)
    Pantůček, R. (CZ)
    Hubálek, Zdeněk (UBO-W) RID, SAI, ORCID
    Falsen, E. (SE)
    Busse, H.-J. (AT)
    Schumann, P. (DE)
    Sedláček, I. (CZ)
    Number of authors7
    Source TitleInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. - : Microbiology Society - ISSN 1466-5026
    Roč. 60, č. 3 (2010), s. 566-573
    Number of pages8 s.
    Languageeng - English
    CountryGB - United Kingdom
    Keywordsgenus Staphylococcus ; clinical specimens ; lipid-composition ; identification ; skin ; classification
    Subject RIVEE - Microbiology, Virology
    CEZAV0Z60930519 - UBO-W (2005-2011)
    UT WOS000276328700016
    EID SCOPUS77949397137
    DOI10.1099/ijs.0.011429-0
    AnnotationTwo very similar bacterial strains of the genus Staphylococcus were isolated from viscera of common voles (Microtus arvalis) with generalized Brucella microti infection in the Czech Republic. A detailed characterization done by ribotyping (EcoRI and HindIII), rpoB and hsp60 gene sequencing, whole-cell protein analysis and rep-PCR using the (GTG)5 primer distinguished the two strains from all validly described staphylococci, and the DNA-DNA hybridization from the phylogenetically most closely related species Staphylococcus muscae (26.75% similarity). The analyzed strains are coagulase-negative, novobiocin-susceptible, oxidase negative, phenotypically close to one another. The major fatty acids were iso-C15:0, iso-C17:0 and anteiso-C15:0 and unsaturated C-18:2omega6,9c/ante-C18:0 and C-18:1omega9c. MK-7 was found as the predominant isoprenoid quinone. The two isolates represent a novel species, with the proposed name Staphylococcus microti; the type strain is CCM 4903T (=CCUG 55861T).
    WorkplaceInstitute of Vertebrate Biology
    ContactHana Slabáková, slabakova@ivb.cz, Tel.: 543 422 524
    Year of Publishing2011
Number of the records: 1  

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