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. 1988 Feb;54(2):534-9.
doi: 10.1128/aem.54.2.534-539.1988.

Use of a unique gene sequence as a probe to enumerate a strain of Bacteroides ruminicola introduced into the rumen

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Use of a unique gene sequence as a probe to enumerate a strain of Bacteroides ruminicola introduced into the rumen

G T Attwood et al. Appl Environ Microbiol. 1988 Feb.

Abstract

Cloned fragments of genomic DNA from the ruminal anaerobe Bacteroides ruminicola subsp. brevis B14 were isolated and used as hybridization probes to identify closely related bacterial species. One DNA fragment unique to strain B14 was tested to determine its sensitivity in detecting homologous sequences among total ruminal microbial DNA. In a DNA titration experiment, the probe was capable of detecting strain B14 sequences in vitro down to 0.1% of the total bacterial DNA present in a hybridization assay. There was no detectable signal for total ruminal bacterial DNA. The specificity of this DNA fragment was exploited to enumerate strain B14 in a fresh mixed suspension of ruminal bacteria in vitro and after inoculation of the strain into the rumen. In vitro strain B14 had a half-life of 9 h. However, following inoculation into the rumen there was a very rapid loss of the strain to below the detectable limit within 3 h. The half-life was less than 30 min. This loss was not due to ruminal dilution or to bacteriophage attack but was possibly the result of a specific bacteriocinlike activity present in the rumen and detectable in fresh ruminal fluid.

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