tuberculosis, Proteus mirabilis, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Salmonella typhi, Salmonella typhimurium, Staphylococcus albus, Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus agalactiae, Streptococcus pneumoniae, Streptococcus pyogenes, and Yersinia enterocolitica (Ranasinghe et al., 2013). The extract of C. zeylanicum also ...
As a negative regulator, the high resistance to H2O2inperRmutant may result from derepression of the PerR regulon. In many bacteria, one important member of PerR regulon for H2O2resistance is catalase [28]. However, all lactic acid bacteria includingS. suislack catalase, it is interesting to i...
Strep. Agalactiae The genus Streptococcus is classified as a gram positive bacteria because of the spherical or ovoid cells that often arranged in pairs and the color it turns too after undergoing the gram staining technique. Unlike the catalase positive genus Staphylococcus, Streptococcus is catalase...
First the streptococci were characterized by the catalase and esculin test, growth in methylene blue and sodium chloride at 6.5%. They were classified in groups by the Slidex Strepto-Kit (BioMerieux, France). The phenotypic characteristics were determined by the Api 20 Strep microtest system (...
Streptococcus agalactiae A 1-week old girl with symptoms of vomiting and poor feeding has a temperature of 102° F. A bulging fontanel is noted. The baby was delivered vaginally. A diagnosis of neonatal meningitis is made. Gram stain of centrifuged cerebrospinal fluid sediment shows gram-positive...
Díaz-Rosales P, Chabrillón M, Arijo S, Martinez-Manzanares E, Moriñigo MA, Balebona MC (2006) Superoxide dismutase and catalase activities inPhotobacterium damselaessp.piscicida. J Fish Dis 29:355–364 ArticlePubMedGoogle Scholar
Streptococcus agalactiae Up to 30% of women carry GBS as part of normal vaginal flora Neonate can acquire GBS during passage through birth canal unless preventative measures are taken. Neonatal disease- leathargy, fever, sepsis, meningitis, respiratory distress. Older children and adults- puerperal ...
Aryl polyenes (APEs) are specialized polyunsaturated carboxylic acids that were identified in silico as the product of the most widespread family of bacterial biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). They are present in several Gram-negative host-associated ba
(for example M proteins or fragments thereof, C5A protease, lipoteichoic acids),S. agalactiae, S. mutans, Haemophilusspp, includingH. influenzaetype B (for example PRP and conjugates thereof), non typeableH. influenzae(for example OMP26, high molecular weight adhesins, P5, P6, lipoprotein D...
agalactiae, S. mutans; Haemophilus spp, including H. influenzae type B (for example PRP and conjugates thereof), non typeable H. influenzae (for example OMP26, high molecular weight adhesins, P5, P6, lipoprotein D), H. ducreyi; Moraxella spp, including M catarrhalis, also known as Branham...