| Literature DB >> 12192525 |
Rachel Pike1, Paul Stapleton, Victoria Lucas, Graham Roberts, Robin Rowbury, Hillary Richards, Peter Mullany, Michael Wilson.
Abstract
Although there is considerable interest in identifying mercury-resistant bacteria, no standardized assay exists for this purpose. In this study, the effect of the composition of the medium on the susceptibility of oral streptococci to HgCl(2) was investigated. The minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of HgCl(2) for 52 streptococcal strains and the reproducibility of MIC values for Hg-sensitive and Hg-resistant strains was determined with 11 different media. Addition of blood increased the MIC values, and some media (tryptone soya agar, with or without blood) could not discriminate between Hg-sensitive and Hg-resistant strains. The proportion of streptococci that appeared to be resistant to Hg was very high (>70%) on some media (mitis-salivarius, tryptone soya, Columbia), but not on others (Mueller-Hinton, Brain Heart Infusion, Isosensitest). The MICs of the control strains varied considerably on different testing occasions for tryptone soya agar (with and without blood), Isosensitest agar, and Columbia agar (with blood). Mueller-Hinton (without blood) appeared to be the most suitable medium for isolating Hg-resistant oral streptococci.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 12192525 DOI: 10.1007/s00284-002-3754-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Microbiol ISSN: 0343-8651 Impact factor: 2.188