U.re.a.plas'ma. N.L. fem. n.
urea
urea; Gr. neut. n.
plasma
anything formed or molded, image, figure; N.L. neut. n.
Ureaplasma
urea form.
Tenericutes / Mollicutes / Mycoplasmatales / Mycoplasmataceae / Ureaplasma
Bacteria in the genus
Ureaplasma
, pleomorphic, small (100–800 nm in diameter), primarily coccoid cells, devoid of a cell wall, surrounded by a trilaminar‐membrane structure. Coccobacillary and filamentous forms also occur. These bacteria form exceptionally tiny (<0.2 mm) colonies on solid media. Similar to the closely related genus
Mycoplasma
, ureaplasmas have small (0.75–1.01 Mb) A+T‐rich genomes, use the codon UGA to encode tryptophan, and are nutritionally fastidious. Unlike mycoplasmas they hydrolyze urea rather than glucose or arginine for ATP synthesis. DNA–DNA hybridizations, serotyping of phase‐variable surface‐exposed lipoproteins [the multiple‐banded antigen (MBA)], PCR, and sequencing of the multiple‐banded antigen gene (
mba
), 16S rRNA, and urease genes have defined the species and serovars for this genus. In nature, all species are commensals and/or opportunistic pathogens of vertebrate hosts. Based on the most recent comparative genome analyses, a consensus is emerging that strains associated with humans, the species
Ureaplasma urealyticum
and
Ureaplasma parvum
, undergo extensive horizontal gene transfer and may exist collectively as quasi‐species rather than as stable serovars in their native environment.
DNA G + C content (mol%)
: 25.4–31.9 (complete genome sequences).
Type species
:
Ureaplasma urealyticum
Shepard et al. 1974
AL
emend. Robertson et al. 2002.