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- Volume 45, Issue 3
- Article
f Mycobacterium branderi sp. nov., a New Potential Human Pathogen
- Authors: PIRKKO KOUKILA-KÄHKÖLÄ, BURKHARDT SPRINGER, ERIK C. BöTTGER, LARS PAULIN, ERIK JANTZEN, MARJA-LEENA KATILA*
- * Corresponding author. Mailing address: Clinical Microbiology, Kuopio University Hospital, P.O. Box 1777, 70211 Kuopio, Finland. Fax: 358-71-17 32 02. Phone: 358-71-17 32 10.
- First Published Online: 01 July 1995, International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 45: 549-553, doi: 10.1099/00207713-45-3-549
- Subject: Original Papers Relating To Systematic Bacteriology
- Cover date:
Mycobacterium branderi sp. nov., a New Potential Human Pathogen, Page 1 of 1
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A number of mycobacterial strains with similar growth characteristics, metabolic properties, and lipid compositions, which were previously placed in the Helsinki group (E. Brander, E. Jantzen, R. Huttunen, A. Juntunen, and M.-L. Katila, J. Clin. Microbiol. 30:1972-1975, 1992), were characterized by performing 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Of the 14 strains studied, 9 had a unique, previously undescribed sequence in the variable region of 16S rRNA. These nine strains, all of which were isolated from respiratory tract specimens, were nonpigmented and grew at 25 C to 45°C, reaching full colony size after 2 to 3 weeks. They produced arylsulfatase, nicotinamidase, and pyrazinamidase and were negative for Tween 80 hydrolysis, catalase, urease, and nitrate reductase activities, and niacin. Their glycplipid patterns were identical. A mycotic acid analysis performed by using thin-layer chromatography showed that these organisms contained alpha-mycolates, ketomycolates, and carboxy mycolates. Gas-liquid chromatography revealed that 2-eicosanol was the major alcohol and hexacosanoic acid was the major mycolic acid cleavage product. On the basis of their growth, biochemical, and lipid characteristics and their unique 16S rRNA sequence, we propose that these organisms should be assigned to a new species, Mycobacterium branderi. Comparative 16S rRNA sequencing revealed that this new species is closely related to Mycobacterium celatum, Mycobacterium cookii, and Mycobacterium xenopi. Strains 52157T (T = type strain) and 43548 have been deposited in the American Type Culture Collection as strains ATCC 51789 and ATCC 51788, respectively.
Copyright © 1995 International Union of Microbiological Societies | Published by the Microbiology Society
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