AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

Flavobacterium columnare is a problematic pathogen for the aquaculture industry where isolates are classified by genomovars. Suspended growth in a low nutrient media, like tryptone yeast extract salts, is a common method used for laboratory study. The presence of calcium and magnesium is the factor contributing to growth, virulence, and biofilm formation for F. columnare. Exponential growth occurs within 24 h for F. columnare when grown in complete tryptone yeast extract salts medium at 30 ºC. Withholding CaCl and MgSO components from a complete TYES formulation reduced or completely inhibited growth of genomovar I isolates but not the growth of genomovar II, IIB, or III isolates. Only 3 of 20 genomovar I isolates, MS-FC-4, FC-CSF-53, and 023-08-3, could achieve O.D. 540 readings ≥ 0.3 but only after 48-h incubation in cation-restricted TYES. Independently adding CaCl or MgSO to tryptone and yeast extracts did not result in a genomovar-specific growth phenotype, but generally demonstrated increased clumping with individual isolates presenting abnormal growth. Clumping formed filamentous strings that migrated to the top of the culture tube when isolates were grown in TYE+CaCl. Several of the F. columnare isolates from all the genomovars exhibited delayed growth when a single cation source was provided. This study demonstrates phenotypic differences between and within genomovars of a single bacterial species when grown under different TYES media conditions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00284-021-02507-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

tryptone yeast
12
growth
9
flavobacterium columnare
8
yeast extract
8
extract salts
8
cacl mgso
8
growth genomovar
8
genomovar isolates
8
isolates
7
columnare
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!