Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:6.3.4.6 (
urease
)
7,490
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Scolecobasidium humicola, a soil fungus and etiologic agent of phaeohyphomycosis in fish, is herein reported to cause cutaneous lesions in a tortoise, Terrapine carolina var. carolina. S. humicola was isolated from lesions on the foot and dematiaceous hyphae were observed in KOH preparations of the biopsy and in stained preparations. This isolate and others were compared morphologically and physiologically with isolates of Dactylaria gallopava which it resembles. As a result of this investigation, we concluded that D. gallopava may be differentiated from S. humicola macroscopically, by the production in D. gallopava of an extensive diffusible purplish-red to reddish-brown pigment when cultured on Sabouraud
dextrose
agar; microscopically, by the presence and usually predominance of conidia, whose apical cell is markedly wider than the basal cell, and usually constricted at the septum; and physiologically, by the ability to grow on media containing cycloheximide and by the ability to grow well at 36-45 degrees C. In contrast, S. humicola does not usually produce a diffusible pigment on Sabouraud's
dextrose
agar or if present, is not extensive; it lacks the wider upper cell; is less constricted or non-constricted at the central septum; grows on media containing cycloheximide, although some inhibition may occur and lastly, does not grow at 36 degrees C or higher. Both species were
urease
positive, hydrolysed tyrosine but not casein, xanthine, or gelatin.
...
PMID:A comparison between Dactylaria gallopava and Scolecobasidium humicola: first report of an infection in a tortoise caused by S. humicola. 404 87
Rapid biochemical tests for nitrate, indole, gelatin, starch, esculin, and o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-
galactopyranoside
were performed on 112 strains of anaerobic bacteria. All tests were incubated under aerobic conditions, and results were recorded within 4 h. The tests for nitrate, indole, and starch showed a 95% or greater correlation when compared to the standard biochemical tests. Tests for esculin and gelatin showed an agreement of 86 and 77%, respectively. PathoTec test strips for nitrate, indole, esculin, o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-
galactopyranoside
, Voges-Proskauer, and
urease
were also tested and showed encouraging results.
...
PMID:Rapid methods for biochemical testing of anaerobic bacteria. 461 68
Three hundred twenty-nine strains of the tribe Klebsielleae were compared by several biochemical tests and by susceptibility to selected antibiotics. Biochemical tests included
urease
, amino acid decarboxylase, and hydrogen sulfide production; fermentation of lactose and
dextrose
; motility; and tests in the IMViC (indole, methyl red, Voges-Proskauer, citrate) series. The isolates were: Klebsiella species, 67.5%; Enterobacter species, 28%, and Serratia species, 4.5%. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of cephaloridine, cephalothin, and a new cephalosporin, cephalexin, and of ampicillin were determined by the agar dilution procedure. Cephalosporins at 20 mug/ml or less inhibited 90% of the Klebsiella strains but only 15% of the Enterobacter strains. Ampicillin inhibited 27% of Enterobacter strains and 17% of Klebsiella strains. Serratia isolates were insensitive to the cephalosporins and ampicillin. The results suggest that precise identification of this group to the generic level can be accomplished readily in the clinical laboratory and that such information is helpful in the preliminary selection of an antibiotic for treatment of clinical infections.
...
PMID:Klebsiella, Enterobacter, and Serratia: biochemical differentiation and susceptibility to ampicillin and three cephalosporin derivatives. 489 80
A multi-biochemical test system consisting of nine tests, entitled Enterotube, was evaluated in parallel with conventional tests to determine its value in the identification of enteric and certain other gram-negative bacilli. The 242 bacterial strains studied were from a variety of pathological specimens and from our culture collection. When the results with individual tests represented in both test systems were compared, no discrepancies were noted in the indole test, and one discrepancy was recorded for
dextrose
. In 7 of 242 hydrogen sulfide tests, 3 of 242 phenylalanine tests, 22 of 242
urease
tests, 15 of 242 dulcitol tests, 12 of 242 lactose tests, 27 of 217 lysine decarboxylase tests, and 5 of 242 citrate tests, the Enterotube results were contrary to those obtained with conventional methods. The lysine decarboxylase test in the Enterotube posed a problem of interpretation and readability and is not an acceptable alternative to the conventional methods. Fifteen of the strains studied were incorrectly identified by the Enterotube system and four could not be differentiated from other closely related strains. Salmonella could be identified as to group, whereas Shigella strains were frequently misidentified as Escherichia. The Enterotube method is simple and convenient, and all media are inoculated at once from a single colony.
...
PMID:Multi-biochemical test system for distinguishing enteric and other gram-negative bacilli. 494 Aug 77
Ninety-seven strains of Cryptococcus neoformans and C. bacillisporus were examined for 44 biochemical characters and the results were analyzed numerically. One phenon emerged at the 86% level of similarity when strains were clustered according to their M-similarity values. All strains grew in ten carbon sources (
D-glucose
, D-
galactose
, arbutin, maltose, sucrose, D-melezitose, D-xylose, D-mannitol, D-glucitol, and meso-inositol), and also grew at 37 degrees C and produced
urease
and phenoloxidase. None of them grew in melibiose, lactose, nor valine, and none reduced nitrate to nitrite. Comparison of selected biochemical characters, creatinine utilization, and serotypes of 49 aberrant strains is presented. Forty-eight of the 97 strains produced the Filobasidiella state either alone or when paired with a strain of compatible mating-type. Filobasidiella neoformans serotypes A and D were interfertile with compatible mating-types of F. bacillispora serotypes B and C. The 44 biochemical characters and 4 serotypes did not predict barriers to mating competence. The present study further substantiates that Filobasidiella neoformans and F. bacillispora are one species.
...
PMID:Biochemical variation of Cryptococcus neoformans. 637 40
Even 70 years ago Gram-negative coccobacilli had been recognized in vaginal discharge and were cultured 30 years ago. The need to have blood in agar medium for cultivation suggested that the organisms might be a Haemophilus species. Later, however, growth characteristics and other features resulted in their being placed in the genus Corynebacterium, before it was realized that this was inappropriate and they were transferred to a new genus and species Gardnerella vaginalis. The organisms are Gram-variable, non-sporing, non-flagellate, non-motile coccobacilli of average size 0.4 X 1-1.5 microns. The cell wall is laminated and some strains possess pili. G. vaginalis is fermentative and
dextrose
, fructose,
galactose
, glucose, maltose,
mannose
, ribose and starch are most likely to be metabolized. However, published patterns of the sugars fermented vary widely and most workers do not rely on such tests as a means of identification. Of many other features exhibited by G. vaginalis, the following are outstanding: it does not produce catalase, cytochrome oxidase, hydrogen sulphide, indole, or
urease
. Nor does it degrade aesculin, liquefy gelatin, reduce nitrate, or decarboxylate arginine, lysine or ornithine. On the other hand, it is sensitive to hydrogen peroxide, often causes beta-haemolysis and usually hydrolyses hippurate and starch. G. vaginalis is serologically heterogeneous and causes haemagglutination which is
mannose
resistant. It is resistant to several antibiotics, including amphotericin, colistin, nalidixic acid and gentamicin, which may be incorporated in selective media.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The bacteriology of Gardnerella vaginalis. 639 9
Simple solid-phase optoelectronic sensors for penicillin, urea, and glucose are described. Triphenylmethane dyes such as bromcresol green and bromthymol blue were derivatized with glutathione and co-immobilized with appropriate enzymes to a transparent membrane sandwiched between a red-light-emitting diode and a silicon photodiode with integral amplifier. In the presence of the corresponding substrates, catalytic action in the enzyme-dye membrane perturbs the local pH and causes characteristic color changes in the membrane which are monitored as a rise or fall in the output voltage of the detector system. With enzymes such as penicillinase,
urease
, and glucose oxidase, the response of the optoelectronic sensors is extremely reproducible over the concentration range 0-10 mM penicillin G, urea, or
D-glucose
, respectively. This report describes the construction and operation of these simple, inexpensive, and reagentless optoelectronic sensors.
...
PMID:Solid-phase optoelectronic sensors for biochemical analysis. 674 21
Biotyping of Haemophilus influenzae into five type and H. parainfluenzae into three types based on indole production, ornithine decarboxylase, and
urease
has been reported (M. Kilian, Acta Pathol. Microbiol. Scand. Sect. B 82:835--842, 1976). A commercially available test system designed for the 4-h identification of Enterobacteriaceae. Micro-ID, proved efficacious for the rapid biotyping of these two Haemophilus species. The nitrate reductase, indole production, ornithine decarboxylase,
urease
, and o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-
galactopyranoside
hydrolysis tests in Micro-ID correlated over 99% with conventional methodology. By utilizing the indole and o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-
galactopyranoside
tests it was possible, with 261 of 272 (96.1%) isolates, to distinguish H. influenzae from H. parainfluenzae. Cerebrospinal fluid isolates were over 90% H. influenzae biotype I, and conjunctival isolates were approximately 70% biotype II. Type b H. influenzae were predominantly biotypes I and II; these type b isolates were also overwhelmingly indole producers. Although over 90% of biotypes I and II have been reported to produce beta-lactamase, this was not confirmed by the small number of beta-lactamase producers encountered here. The 4-h Micro-ID should prove a useful mechanism, amenable to the routine clinical laboratory, for the further exploration of the association of Haemophilus with the site of isolation, antigenicity, and antibiotic resistance.
...
PMID:Rapid biochemical characterization of Haemophilus species by using the micro-ID. 698 1
A determination-key is suggested, which can used for interpretation of "Bunte Reihe". In the first step seven reaction will tested (
dextrose
-gas-formation, acid-production from lactose, H2S-formation,
urease
-activity, indol-formation, motility, LDC-activity). The resulting pattern of reaction leads into a codenumber (Table 1). Table 2 shows a list with species/Genera for each pattern of reaction. Are two or more species in the ascertained codenumber, it is necessary to make further tests. They can have selected and interpreted by using table 3 (second step). The main advantages in use of this two-step determination-key for Enterobacteriaceae are: 1. By selection of a higher confidence level as used in most other determination-tables, together with coding the pattern of reaction, the interpretation of "Bunte Reihe" is easy. 2. Subjective and objective errors by interpretation of reactions will prevented. 3. For single reaction is fixed a time up to two days. In comparison with many other methods it brings a shortening of differentiation time in most cases. 4. It isn't necessary to buy an expensive commercial diagnostic-system. The usual "Bunte Reihe" media can used successfull. 5. Because of elimination of subjective interpretation it is possible to compare the results of laboratories, which works by using this determination-key.
...
PMID:[A key for the determination of Enterobacteriaceae in routine- laboratories (author's transl)]. 704 9
Lactose-positive Vibrio is a recently recognized marine organism that has pathogenic potential for humans. An organism was isolated from the sputum and blood of a man who was resuscitated after drowning in the sea. The isolates from both sources had the characteristics of lactose-positive Vibrio, which include positive oxidase, citrate, indole, and o-nitrophenyl-beta-D-
galactopyranoside
reactions and negative Voges-Proskauer,
urease
, and sucrose reactions. Seawater samples from 21 sites around Galveston Island were cultured for lactose-positive Vibrio over a period of 4 weeks, and 36% of the samples yielded the organism. The environmental isolates were very similar to the clinical isolates in biochemical reactions and susceptibility to antimicrobial agents. The results indicate that lactose-positive Vibrio is a common organism in the marine environment and that it should be considered in the diagnosis of infections, including pneumonia, associated with exposure to the sea.
...
PMID:Lactose-positive Vibrio in seawater: a cause of pneumonia and septicemia in a drowning victim. 738 Oct 3
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>