Escherichia coli were isolated at concentrations of about 102/ml from the fluid obtained after thawing each of five frozen chicken carcasses. Between 13 and 89% of the E. coli were resistant to mercury(II) or to at least one of eight antibiotics tested. Multiple resistance was more common than single resistance, and resistances to tetracycline, streptomycin, sulfathiazole, or chloramphenicol were more frequently encountered than was resistance to ampicillin or mercury(II). Resistance to kanamycin, gentamicin, or trimethoprim occurred rarely. Upwards of 30% of the E. coli apparently carried conjugative plasmids and could transfer at least one of their resistance determinants to E. coli K-12. Twenty-five conjugative R plasmids obtained in this way were characterized within strain K-12 by a variety of phenotypic criteria. Twenty could be assigned to the incompatibility groups
Oral anaerobic treponemes are assoicated with active periodontal disease and may comprise up to 57% of the microbiota in periodontal pockets. Four treponeme strains (designated U2a, U2b, U9b, and U9c) isolated from clincial cases were found to harbor a new 4.2-kb plasmid when plasmid DNA was extracted and purified employing the Qiagen Plasmid Kit. This plasmid differs from the smaller plasmids (2.0-, 2.6-, and 2.7-Kb) reported previously by others in Treponema denticola. The newly discovered 4.2-kb plasmid was found to be the same in all four treponeme strains by restriction endonuclease analysis. It is a circular plasmid since restriction with PstI, Pvu II, Sma I, Xma I, Ava 1 or Bam HI produced a single band of the same size. Bacterial strain U2b was shown to be Treponema socranskii and U9c to be T. denticola. The plasmid is designated "pTS1". The presence of the same plasmid in different species of the treponemes isolated from the same patient suggests the possibility of a naturally occurring genetic transfer system within the oral spirochetes or their ability to take up and maintain mobilizable plasmids.
Fifteen oral spirochete strains belonging to the species Treponema denticola, Treponema vencentii and Treponema socranskii as well as 9 fresh clinical isolates were screened for the presence of extrachromosomal plasmid DNA by a modified alkaline lysis procedure. A 2.6-kb plasmid was detected in both T. denticola ATCC 33520 and T. denticola e'. The 2.6-kb plasmid from T. denticola e' was shown to be similar to pTD1, previously reported by Ivic et al. in T. denticola ATCC 33520 on the basis of molecular weight, restriction endonuclease profile and DNA:DNA hybridization. T. denticola ATCC 33520 and T. denticola e' share 65% DNA homology and belong to different serological groups. This dissimilarity has been reconfirmed by specific immunofluorescence using polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies. A plasmid-free T. denticola ATCC 33520 was identified. Comparative studies have shown no antigenic, morphological, or genetic differences between the plasmid-bearing and the plasmid-free strain. In addition, screening of fresh clinical isolates of spirochetes revealed the presence of a 4.2-kb plasmid in 4 of these strains.
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