Mycobacterium malmoense
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Mycobacterium malmoense | ||||||||||||||
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Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
Mycobacterium malmoense Schroder and Juhlin 1977, ATCC 29571 |
Mycobacterium malmoense is a bacterium.
Etymology: malmoense, from the city of Malmö, Sweden where it was first isolated.
Contents |
[edit] Description
Gram-positive, nonmotile, acid-fast and coccoid to short rods.
- Environmental reservoir: soil and water.
Colony characteristics
- Smooth and nonpigmented colonies, growth below the surface of semisolid agar medium after deep inoculation (as seen with M. bovis), 0.9 - 1.7mm in diameter.
Physiology
- Growth on inspissated egg medium and oleic acid-albumin agar at a temperature range of 22°C-37°C requires over 1 week.
- Susceptible to ethambutol, ethionamide, kanamycin and cycloserine.
Differential characteristics
- Antigenic structure: seroagglutination demonstrates a single serovar distinct from that of other species.
[edit] Pathogenesis
- Usually infects young children with cervical lymphadenitis or adults with chronic pulmonary disease, (mostly with previously documented pneumoconiosis).
- Rarely causes extrapulmonary diseases and disseminated infections
- Biosafety level 2
[edit] Type Strain
Strain ATCC 29571 = CCUG 37761 = CIP 105775 = DSM 44163 = JCM 13391 = NCTC 11298.
[edit] References
- Schroder,K., I. Juhlin 1977. Mycobacterium malmoense sp. nov. International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology, 1977, 27, 241-246.]