Lf. Nelms et al., DIFFERENTIATION OF RUMINAL AND HUMAN STREPTOCOCCUS-BOVIS STRAINS BY DNA HOMOLOGY AND 16S RIBOSOMAL-RNA PROBES, Current microbiology, 31(5), 1995, pp. 294-300
Streptococcus bovis is commonly present in the rumen, but strains of S
. bovis have also occasionally been isolated from human blood or fecal
samples. Studies were undertaken with 16s rRNA gene sequences and DNA
hybridizations to define the genetic relationships between these two
groups of strains. Ruminal strains were found to yield genomic DNA res
triction endonuclease digest patterns different from human strains whe
n either the 16s rRNA gene amplified from ruminal S. bovis strain JB1
or a conserved universal 23s rRNA fragment was used as probes. A DNA p
robe based on the V1 region of the 16s rRNA of S. bovis JB1 was found
to hybridize to DNAs of other ruminal S. bovis strains (K27FF4, 21-09-
6C, five new ruminal isolates, and weak hybridization was found with D
NAs from S. bovis 33317 (type strain), S. equinus 9812, and six other
ruminal isolates. No hybridization occurred with strains representing
different major human biotypes/homology groups (43143, 43144, 27960, V
1387). All ruminal S. bovis strains had a guanosine plus cytosine DNA
content of 37.4-38.8 mol% and, based on DNA-DNA genomic hybridizations
, could be separated into two homology groups, one of which included S
. equinus 9812 and S. bovis 33317. Both ruminal groups had less than 3
8% DNA homology to the human strains, indicating ruminal strains are c
learly two separate species distinct from the human strains.