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Strain-to-strain variation of Rhodococcus equi growth and biofilm formation in vitro.


ABSTRACT: OBJECTIVE:Rhodococcus equi is an opportunistic pathogen that causes disease worldwide in young foals and immunocompromised humans. The interactions of R. equi with the host immune system have been described; however, most studies have been conducted using a few well-characterized strains. Because biological differences between R. equi strains are not well characterized, it is unknown if experimental results will replicate when different strains are used. Therefore, our objective was to compare the growth and biofilm formation of low-passage-rate clinical isolates of R. equi to higher-passage-rate, commonly studied isolates to determine whether strain-to-strain variation exists. RESULTS:Twelve strains were used: 103+, ATCC 33701, UKVDL206 103S harboring a GFP-expressing plasmid, a plasmid-cured 33701 (higher-passage-rate) and seven low-passage clinical isolates. Generation time in liquid revealed fast, moderate-fast, moderate-slow, and slow-growing isolates. The higher-passage-rate isolates were among the moderate-slow growing strains. A strain's rate of growth did not correspond to its ability to form biofilm nor to its colony size on solid media. Based on our results, care should be taken not to extrapolate in vitro work that may be conducted using different R. equi strains. Further work is needed to evaluate the effect that the observed differences may have on experimental results.

SUBMITTER: Bujold AR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6701102 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Strain-to-strain variation of Rhodococcus equi growth and biofilm formation in vitro.

Bujold Adina R AR   Lani Nicholas R NR   Sanz Macarena G MG  

BMC research notes 20190819 1


<h4>Objective</h4>Rhodococcus equi is an opportunistic pathogen that causes disease worldwide in young foals and immunocompromised humans. The interactions of R. equi with the host immune system have been described; however, most studies have been conducted using a few well-characterized strains. Because biological differences between R. equi strains are not well characterized, it is unknown if experimental results will replicate when different strains are used. Therefore, our objective was to c  ...[more]

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2013-05-31 | GSE45004 | GEO