“…pestis uses haemin and a wide variety of host haemcontaining complexes including haemoglobin, haemoglobin-haptoglobin, myoglobin, haem-haemopexin, and haem-albumin as sources of iron (Perry and Brubaker, 1979;Sikkema and Brubaker, 1989;Staggs and Perry, 1991). In addition to Y. pestis, a number of pathogenic bacteria including the enteropathogenic yersiniae (Perry and Brubaker, 1979;Stojiljkovic and Hantke, 1992), Vibrio species (Helms et a/., 1984;Mazoy and Lemos, 1991;Stoebner and Payne, 1988;Yamamoto eta/., 1995), Haemophilus species (Coulton and Pang, 1983;Lee, 1991 ;Stull, 1987), Neisseria species (Archibald and DeVoe, 1980;Dyer et a/., 1987;Mickelsen and Sparling, 1981), Campylobacter jejuni (Pickett et a/. , 1992), Helicobacter pylori (Hazel1 et a/., 1986), Plesiomonas shigelloides (Daskaleros et a/., 1991), Shigella dysenteriae (Mills and Payne, 1995), Klebsiella pneumoniae (Ward et a/., 1986), enteropathogenic Escherichia coli strains (Law et a/., 1992), Porphyromonas gingivalis (Bramanti and Holt, 1991), Serratia marcescens ( Letoffe et a/., 1994), and Streptococcus pneumoniae (Tai et a/.…”