IDENTIFICATION OF LACTOBACILLUS STRAINS ISOLATED FROM PATIENTS WITH INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS AND COMPARISON OF THEIR SURFACE-ASSOCIATED PROPERTIES WITH THOSE OF OTHER STRAINS OF THE SAME SPECIES

Citation
Dws. Harty et al., IDENTIFICATION OF LACTOBACILLUS STRAINS ISOLATED FROM PATIENTS WITH INFECTIVE ENDOCARDITIS AND COMPARISON OF THEIR SURFACE-ASSOCIATED PROPERTIES WITH THOSE OF OTHER STRAINS OF THE SAME SPECIES, Microbial ecology in health and disease, 6(4), 1993, pp. 191-201
Citations number
51
Categorie Soggetti
Microbiology,Ecology
ISSN journal
0891060X
Volume
6
Issue
4
Year of publication
1993
Pages
191 - 201
Database
ISI
SICI code
0891-060X(1993)6:4<191:IOLSIF>2.0.ZU;2-J
Abstract
Ten strains of lactobacilli isolated from infective endocarditis (IE) cases were speciated using the API 50CHL identification system and the IDENTIFY computer program, and shown to be either Lactobacillus rhamn osus (five strains) or L. paracasei subsp. paracasei strains (five str ains). A comparison of their adhesive and surface-associated propertie s with 14 strains (seven each from the same two species) isolated from other sources indicated that the IE strains showed a significantly gr eater aggregation by saliva (P=0.005) and a significantly increased bi nding of fibronectin at pH 5.4. When the two species were compared, th e IE L. rhamnosus group of strains had significantly higher values for hydrophobicity, hydroxyapatite adhesion (HA) and salivary aggregation (P<0.05) than the laboratory strains, whereas none of the assays were significantly different for the IE L. paracasei subsp. paracasei stra ins. Fibronectin binding was significantly increased for both species when the pH was reduced from 7.3 to 5.4. Fibronectin binding at pH 5.4 was correlated with the cell surface charge, while polystyrene adhesi on was correlated with both hydrophobicity and HA adhesion. The data i ndicated that there may be a contributory role for surface-associated properties in the pathogenesis of Lactobacillus endocarditis, and that strains isolated from IE patients, particularly L. rhamnosus, differ in important respects (hydrophobicity, salivary aggregation and HA adh esion) from most other strains of the same species.