1887

Abstract

SUMMARY

Clinical and bacteriological findings in seven cases of urinary tract infection with cysteine-requiring strains of are described. The organisms were isolated from patients with long-standing urinary tract abnormalities and grew as small (. 1 mm) colonies on MacConkey agar. The organisms failed to grow in a minimal medium supplemented with sodium sulphate but grew when the medium was supplemented with cysteine sulphinic acid, sodium sulphide or L-cysteine. The smallest amount of cysteine required for optimal growth in a chemically denned medium was 20 mg/L. Cysteine-requiring strains of had previously been shown to require a similar amount of cysteine and to be unable to reduce sulphate to sulphite; this suggests a common influence in the selection of cysteine auxotrophs . However, the amino acid inhibited the growth of at concentrations which only slightly altered growth of the strains. Problems with the isolation, identification and sensitivity testing of cysteine-requiring were also observed and methods by which these may be minimised are suggested.

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1988-07-01
2024-05-02
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