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Infect. Immun., 01 1997, 49-54, Vol 65, No. 1
SG Lee, C Kim and YC Ha
We have devised a procedure that permits the cultivation of a gram-
positive coccoid species from biopsy material obtained from the antrum of
the stomachs of patients with gastric disorders. Antibodies directed
against surface proteins obtained from the coccoid isolates were detected
in all patients with gastric disorders examined in this study, including
both Helicobacter pylori-infected and H. pylori-uninfected patients.
Several of these isolates, including a prototype designated strain SL100,
have been characterized in some detail. Strain SL100 exhibits urease and
exceptionally high catalase activities and assumes a variety of spherical
morphologies as detected by electron microscopy. This isolate expresses an
adhesin that binds to gastric mucin. The adhesin activity was detected only
after the isolate was exposed to an acidic pH, suggesting that in the
natural process of infection, the low pH of the stomach unmasks a cell
surface component with adhesin activity. Strain SL100 grows best under a
microaerophilic conditions (10% CO2, 5% O2, 85% N2), but it also grows
quite well under aerobic conditions. Thus, this organism would be expected
to proliferate outside of the human host as well as in the gastric mucosa.
Oral infection of newborn piglets resulted in colonization of the gastric
antrum and growth retardation. Preliminary taxonomic classification
indicates similarity to the Staphylococcus DNA homology groups containing
S. cohnii and S. xylosus. One of us (C.K.) apparently became infected with
this organism as indicated by gastric symptoms and the subsequent presence
of strain-specific antisera not present in other workers in the laboratory.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
Successful cultivation of a potentially pathogenic coccoid organism with trophism for gastric mucin
Mogam Institute, Kyong-gi-do, Yong-in-Kun, Seoul, Korea.
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