Rutin and quercitrin are hydrolysed to quercetin, and robinin is hydrolysed to kaempferol, by faecal flora from healthy subjects. The enzymes required for these hydrolyses, namely alpha-rhamnosidase and beta-galactosidase, were produced by some strains of Bacteroides distasonis; other strains, however, synthesized beta-glucosidase. The last-named enzyme was also elaborated by Bacteroides uniformis and Bacteroides ovatus. All the enzymes were produced constitutively. A cell-free extract of B. distasonis containing beta-glucosidase displayed an enzymic activity of 1 mumol/10 min per 10 mg of protein.
Four hitherto undescribed Clostridium strains capable of cleaving the C ring of quercetin, kaempferol, and naringenin at C-3-C-4 were isolated from the fecal flora of humans. None of the strains cleaved catechin. C-ring fission occurred when the substrate was either in solution or in suspension. Mixed cultures of flavonoidhydrolyzing bacteria, flavonoid-cleaving bacteria, and Escherichia coli, which was used to provide the anaerobic environment, rapidly metabolized rutin to 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid, indicating that the intestinal half-life of the biologically active aglycone is short. The cleaving strains shared many phenotypic characteristics, including their inability to ferment sugars, but they differed sufficiently to indicate that they represent different species.
Clostridium orbiscindens sp. nov. is an obligate anaerobe that is capable of cleaving the C-3-C-4 bond of the natural anticarcinogen quercetin. The metabolic products, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid and presumably phlorglucinol, are not known to possess anticarcinogen properties. This organism was isolated from human feces. On sheep blood agar plates C. orbiscindens forms minute, irregular, convex, gray or white, shiny, smooth, nonhemolytic colonies. It is beta-hemolytic on rabbit blood agar. The motile peritrichous rods are gram variable. Subpolar spores are common. Cultures are resistant to 80°C for 10 min. Capsules are absent. This asaccharolytic organism does not metabolize esculin, urea, meat, gelatin, casein, or nitrate. The G+C content is 56 to 57 mol% . DNA hybridization experiments did not reveal relatedness to phenotypically similar
Of 46 broiler chickens from a live poultry market in New York City, 38 (83%) harbored Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni in their rectal flora. The observed mean number of C. fetus per g of feces was 4.4 x 10"3. The organisms survived in
Clostridium scindens sp. nov., an obligate anaerobe with desmolytic activity, was isolated from human fecal flora. The desmolase, not associated previously with any specific intestinal microorganism, cleaves the carbon-carbon bond of 17-hydroxylated corticoids at C17-C20, thereby converting them to androstans (C19 steroids). In primary cultures on sheep blood agar plates, C. scindens forms minute, nonhemdytic colonies.
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