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Annals of Clinical and Laboratory Science, Vol 11, Issue 1, 53-62
Copyright © 1981 by Association of Clinical Scientists


Articles

A comparison of some biologic characteristics of isolates of the Legionnaires' disease bacterium

RA Ormsbee, MG Peacock, WD Bickel, and P Fiset

The ability of three isolates of serogroup 1 and one isolate of serogroup 4 of Legionnaires' disease bacterium (LDB) to infect and cause fever and death in guinea pigs was studied, as well as their ability to produce plaques in cultured primary chick embryo cells. The serogroup 4 isolate originally was recovered from cord clot and placental tissue from a healthy mother following delivery of a normal child. The effects on LDB of prolonged cultivation on supplemented Mueller-Hinton (MH) agar medium and of subsequent cultivation in yolk sacs of chick embryos were examined. Prolonged cultivation of LDB on MH medium resulted in great loss of ability to produce plaques and to cause fever and death in guinea pigs. Subsequent passage in embryonated eggs of MH-adapted LDB tended to restore ability to produce plaques and to cause infection and illness in guinea pigs. Fatty acid composition profiles of the four strains were similar to each other.





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Copyright © 1981 by the Association of Clinical Scientists.