Previous attempts to obtain in vitro wall-deficient stable L-forms of various strains of Brucella have failed because the obtained spheroplasts revert quickly to bacterial form. Here, we report the isolation of L-forms from mice infected with a B. suis strain type 1 and treated with penicillin. In defined experimental conditions, L-type microcolonies associated with tissue debris were observed in primary spleen cultures, even on antibiotic free media. After several transfers on penicillin-containing medium. typical, tissue-free L colonies were obtained. At first, when cultivated on antibiotic-free medium, these colonies reverted to the bacterial form (identified as B suis, biotype 1). Later, after approximately fifteen transfers on penicillin-supplemented medium, they no longer reverted even after several subcultures on antibiotic-free medium. The L-forms' ultrastructural features included many giant empty bodies, considerable variation in size, shape and density of the wall-deficient cells, and many multilayered membranes. The stabilized L-forms were propagated in vitro and inoculated into mice, and then recovered from their spleens as tissue associated L-microcolonies. An occasional in vivo revertant was identified as B. suis, biotype 1. These data provide one possible explanation for earlier failures to detect the presence of atypical bacteria in clinical or experimental Brucella infections.
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Arch Microbiol
May 2024
Departamento de Microbiología, Escuela Nacional de Ciencias Biológicas, Instituto Politécnico Nacional, 11340, Ciudad de Mexico, México.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFProblem: Long-lived mycobacterial L-forms (mL-forms) could be detected in the blood of BCG-vaccinated people. We have previously found mL-forms in term placentas and blood of neonates, delivered by healthy BCG-vaccinated mothers as first formal demonstration that BCG vaccination in the childhood of the woman could affect her placentobiome during pregnancy. Of note, the isolated mL-forms reverted to the cell-walled state of the parental BCG bacilli in vitro.
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June 2022
Department of Anthropology, NMNH-MRC 112, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560, USA.
Correct age-at-death estimation in adult individuals is one of the challenges of forensic investigation. Forensic anthropology macroscopic techniques are non-invasive methods for this purpose. However, several methods need to be applied to accurately estimate age, and the difference between chronological and predictive age may still be around ±10 years.
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Institute for Food, Nutrition and Health, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
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View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Vet Scand
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Norwegian Veterinary Institute, Post Box 64, 1431, Ås, Norway.
Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders with known natural occurrence in humans and a few other mammalian species. The diseases are experimentally transmissible, and the agent is derived from the host-encoded cellular prion protein (PrP), which is misfolded into a pathogenic conformer, designated PrP (scrapie). Aggregates of PrP molecules, constitute proteinaceous infectious particles, known as prions.
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