| Microbiology, 5/e Lansing M Prescott,
Augustana College Donald A Klein,
Colorado State University John P Harley,
Eastern Kentucky University
Bacteria: The High G + C Gram Positives
Study Outline- General Properties of the Actinomycetes
- Exhibit filamentous growth
- Form substrate mycelia
- 2 Septa divide the mycelia into long cells (20 um and longer), each
containing several nucleoids
- Some form a tissue-like mass called a thallus
- They may have aerial mycelia that form conidospores at the ends of
filaments or that form sporangiospores within a sporangium; spores are
not heat resistant but withstand desiccation
- Actinomycetes are generally nonmotile, but spores may be flagellated
- Cell wall types vary and can be distinguished by the amino acid in position
3 of the tetrapeptide, the presence of glycine in the interpeptide bridge,
and the sugar content; four types are known
- Cell wall type, sugars in extracts, morphology and color of mycelia and
sporangia, G + C content, membrane phospholipid composition, and heat resistance
of the spores are all important in classifying these organisms, as is comparison
of 16S rRNA sequences and pulse-field electrophoresis of large DNA fragments
produced by restriction endonuclease digestion
- Are of considerable practical importance
- Those in soil degrade a number of organic compounds and are important
in the mineralization processes; also produce most of the medically
important, naturally synthesized antibiotics
- A few species are pathogenic in humans, other animals, and plants
- High G + C Gram-Positive Bacteria in Bergey?s Manual
- The 1st edition of Bergey?s Manual divides the actinomycetes into 7
sections, primarily based on cell wall type, conidia arrangement, and
the presence or absence of a sporangium
- The 2nd edition uses 16S rRNA sequences to create a large phylum, Actinobacteria,
containing one class Actinobacteria, five subclasses, six orders, 14 suborders
and 40 families
- This chapter focuses on the subclass Actinobacteridae and the order
Actinomycetales; the order Bfidobacteriales is also briefly described
- Suborder Actinomycineae
- Most genera are irregularly shaped, nonsporing rods with aerobic or
facultative metabolism
- Genus Actinomyces
- Straight or slightly curved rods and slender filaments with true
branching
- Facultative or obligate anaerobes; require CO2 for best growth
- Cell walls contain lysine but not diaminopimelic acid
- Normal inhabitants of mucosal surfaces of warm-blooded animals;
some cause disease in their hosts
- Suborder Micrococcineae
- Contains 10 families and many genera
- Genus Micrococcus
- Aerobic, catalase-positive cocci that occur in pairs, tetrads or
irregular clusters; usually nonmotile
- Often, yellow, red, or orange pigmented
- Widespread in soil, water, and on mammalian skin; usually not pathogenic
- Genus Arthrobacter
- Aerobic, catalase-positive rods with respiratory metabolism and
lysine in peptidoglycan
- Exhibit a rod-coccus growth cycle
- When growing in exponential phase they are rods that reproduce
by a snapping division
- In stationary phase they change to a coccoid form
- Upon transfer to fresh medium, coccoid cells produce outgrowths
and resume active reproduction as rods
- Most important habitat is soil
- Resistant to desiccation and nutrient deprivation
- Very flexible nutritionally; able to degrade some herbicides
and pesticides
- Genus Dermatophilus
- Forms packets of motile spores with tufts of flagella
- Facultative anaerobe
- Mammalian parasite responsible for a skin infection called streptothrichosis
- Suborder Corynebacterineae
- Contains seven families with several important genera
- Genus Corynebacterium (family Corynebacteriaceae)
- Aerobic and facultative species; catalase-positive; straight to
slightly curved rods, often with tapered ends
- Remain partially attached after snapping division resulting
in angular arrangements
- Form metachromatic granules
- Cell walls contain meso-diaminopimelic acid
- Some species are harmless soil and water saprophytes; many are
animal and human pathogens (e.g., C. diphtheriae-causative agent of
diphtheria in humans)
- Genus Mycobacterium (family Mycobacteriaceae)
- Straight or slightly curved rods that sometimes branch or form
filaments
- Aerobic and catalase-positive; grow very slowly
- Cell walls contain waxes with 60-90 carbon mycolic acids-make them
acid-fast (i.e. basic fuchsin dye cannot be removed with acid-alcohol
treatment)
- Some are free-living saprophytes; but they are best known as human
and animal pathogens
- M. bovis-tuberculosis in cattle and other ruminants
- M. tuberculosis-tuberculosis in humans
- M. leprae-causes leprosy in humans
- Genera Nocardia and Rhodococcus (family Nocardiaceae)
- These and related species are collectively called nocardioforms
- Develop a substrate mycelium that readily breaks into rods and
coccoid elements; some develop aerial mycelia
- Most are strict aerobes
- They are found in soil and aquatic habitats
- Nocardia degrade hydrocarbons and waxes and are involved in
biodegradation of rubber joints in water and sewage pipes; most
are free-living saprophytes, but some species (e.g., N. asteroides)
are opportunistic pathogens causing nocardiosis
- Rhodococcus can degrade a wide variety of molecules, including
those found in toxic wastes
- Suborder Micromonosporineae
- Contains many genera that are often referred to as Actinoplanetes
- Extensive substrate mycelia; aerial mycelia are absent or rudimentary
- Form conidiospores within a sporangium that extends above the surface
of the substratum; spores can be motile or nonmotile
- Genera vary in arrangement and development of spores
- Found in soil and freshwater habitats and occasionally in the ocean
- Soil dwellers play an important role in plant and animal decomposition
- Some produce antibiotics such as gentamicin
- Suborder Propionibacterineae
- Contains two families and 10 genera
- Genus Propionibacterium
- Pleomorphic, nonmotile rods that are often club shaped; cells may
also be coccoid or even branched; single cells, short chains, or in
clumps
- Facultatively anaerobic or aerotolerant; ferment sugars to produce
propionic acid
- Found on skin and in the digestive tract of animals; also in dairy
products such as cheese; contribute to the production of Swiss cheese;
P. acne is involved in the development of body odor and acne vulgaris
- Suborder Streptomycineae
- Only one family, Streptomycetaceae and three genera
- Have aerial mycelia that divide in a single plane to form chains
of nonmotile conidiospores
- Commonly called streptomycetes
- Genus Streptomyces
- An enormous genus with around 500 species 2 Strict aerobes
- Form nonmotile spores within a thin sheath
- Streptomycetes are ecologically and medically important
- Natural habitat is soil where they represent from 1-20% of the
organisms present (impart the characteristic odor of moist earth by
producing volatile substances such as geosmin)
- Metabolically flexible; major contributors to mineralization
- Best known for the synthesis of a vast array of antibiotics useful
in medicine and research
- Only S. somaliensis is known to be pathogenic in humans; it causes
actinomycetoma, an infection of subcutaneous tissues that produces
swelling, abscesses and bone destruction
- Genus Streptoverticillium-has aerial hyphae in a whorl of three to
six short branches
- Suborder Streptosporangineae
- Contains 3 families and 14 genera
- Many referred to as maduromycetes because the sugar madurose (3-O-methyl-D-galactose)
is found in their cell extracts; have aerial mycelia that produce pairs
or short chains of spores; substrate mycelia are branched; some genera
form sporangia
- Genus Thermomonospora-produce single spores on the aerial mycelium
or on both the aerial and the substrate mycelium; isolated from high temperature
habitats such as compost piles and hay
- Suborder Frankineae
- Genera Frankia and Geodermatophilus
- Form clusters of spores
- The genus Geodermatophilus has motile spores and is an aerobic
soil organism
- The genus Frankia
- Forms nonmotile sporangiospores in a sporogenous body
- Grows in symbiotic relationship with at least 8 families of
higher nonleguminous plants
- Microaerophilic and able to fix atmospheric nitrogen
- Genus Sporichthya-lack a substrate mycelium but use holdfasts to anchor
to the substratum; grow upward to form aerial mycelia that release motile,
flagellated conidia in the presence of water
- Order Bfidobacteriales
- Contains one true family and 8 genera
- Genera Falcivibrio and Gardnerella are found in the human genitourinary
tract; Gardnerella may be a major cause of vaginitis
- Genus Bfidobacterium is best studied
- Nonmotile, nonsporing, gram-positive rods of varied shapes that
are slightly curved and clubbed; often they are branched; rods can
be single cells, in clusters or in V-shaped pairs
- Anaerobic and ferment carbohydrates to produce acetic and lactic
acids but no carbon dioxide
- Found in the mouth and intestinal tract of warm-blooded animals,
in sewage, and in insects
- B.bfidus is a pioneer colonizer of the human intestinal tract,
particularly when babies are breast-fed
- Some infections of humans have been reported but does not appear
to be a major cause of disease
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