2006
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2672.2006.02809.x
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Evaluation of different methods to discriminate Bacillus anthracis from other bacteria of the Bacillus cereus group

Abstract: Aims: To evaluate different methods that are useful for rapid and definitive discrimination of Bacillus anthracis from other bacteria of the Bacillus cereus group in environmental samples like letters claimed to contain anthrax spores. Methods and Results: Characterized strains and bacteria from environmental samples were analysed by microbiological and molecular methods (PCR and restriction analysis). Environmental isolates often shared several microbiological features with B. anthracis, e.g. lack of b-haemol… Show more

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Cited by 51 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…strain 2617, and Bacillus sp. strain 153 (26). Sequencing of the SG-749 fragment of B. anthracis strains CI and CA revealed six nucleotide differences compared to classic B. anthracis strains (data not shown), confirming the restriction pattern through the identification of an additional AluI restriction site, which results in restriction fragments of 496 bp, 166 bp, and 89 bp compared to fragments of 662 bp and 89 bp for classic B. anthracis strains.…”
Section: Vol 188 2006 B Anthracis-like Bacteria Isolated From Greasupporting
confidence: 48%
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“…strain 2617, and Bacillus sp. strain 153 (26). Sequencing of the SG-749 fragment of B. anthracis strains CI and CA revealed six nucleotide differences compared to classic B. anthracis strains (data not shown), confirming the restriction pattern through the identification of an additional AluI restriction site, which results in restriction fragments of 496 bp, 166 bp, and 89 bp compared to fragments of 662 bp and 89 bp for classic B. anthracis strains.…”
Section: Vol 188 2006 B Anthracis-like Bacteria Isolated From Greasupporting
confidence: 48%
“…AluI restriction of the SG-749 fragment, a randomly amplified polymorphic DNA marker specific for the B. cereus complex, revealed a unique restriction type for all classic B. anthracis strains tested (9,26). However, in B. anthracis strains CI and CA, a different restriction pattern was found, which was identical to the patterns found in the environmental isolates B. cereus Hohenheim, Bacillus sp.…”
Section: Vol 188 2006 B Anthracis-like Bacteria Isolated From Greamentioning
confidence: 51%
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“…To check for the universality of the results that were obtained by using spores from Bacillus subtilis, spores of the following bacterial strains were analysed: Bacillus anthracis 527, Bacillus anthracis Stamatin Sokol, Bacillus anthracis Sterne strain 34F2, Bacillus anthracis UDIII-7 (see Klee et al, 2006 for a molecular typology of the different anthrax strains), Bacillus atrophaeus ATCC 9372, Bacillus cereus ATCC 10987, Bacillus stearothermophilus (gke Steri-Record; gke GmbH, Germany), Bacillus thuringiensis (DSM 350), Clostridium botulinum NCTC 7272, and Clostridium difficile NCTC 13366. Spores were produced according to a European standard procedure (prEN 14347:2001 [D]) and stored at 4 °C in double distilled water until use.…”
Section: Bacterial Strains and Generation Of Sporesmentioning
confidence: 99%