The cultural and biochemical characters of Streptococcus milleri strains isolated from human sources
- PMID: 762404
- PMCID: PMC2130127
- DOI: 10.1017/s002217240002547x
The cultural and biochemical characters of Streptococcus milleri strains isolated from human sources
Abstract
A collection of 346 strains of Streptococcus milleri from a variety of human sources was examined culturally and biochemically, and for the presence of Lancefield group antigens. Most of the strains were non-haemolytic and ungroupable, but 25% were beta haemolytic and 19% were alpha haemolytic; 28% possessed a group antigen (A, 5%; C, 6%, F, 14%, G, 3%). These antigens were present in 69% of beta-haemolytic but in only 13% of alpha-haemolytic or non-haemolytic strains; beta haemolysis occurred in 82% of group-F strains, 43% of other groupable strains and 11% of ungroupable strains.The following reactions were given by > 80% of S. milleri strains: hydrolysis of arginine and aesculin, a positive Voges-Proskauer reaction, and acidification of trehalose, lactose, salicin and sucrose. A minority of strains showed enhancement of growth by CO(2), bile tolerance, NaCl tolerance, and ability to acidify other sugars, notably mannitol, raffinose and melibiose. Departures from the modal pattern of biochemical reactions showed a weak correlation with the type of haemolysis and the presence or absence of a group antigen but were not sufficiently systematic for clear-cut subdivisions to be recognized within the species.S. milleri therefore appeared to comprise a ;central' group of non-haemolytic strains that rarely formed a Lancefield-group antigen, in which the aesculin reaction was nearly always positive, lactose was usually acidified, and a considerable minority showed enhancement of growth by CO(2) and bile tolerance. Deviations from this pattern were of two main types. (1) ;Loss' of one or more of these reactions, which tended to be associated with beta-haemolysis and presence of a group antigen. In these respects, alpha-haemolytic strains tended to occupy an intermediate position. (2) ;Gain' of the ability to acidify additional sugars, notably raffinose and melibiose or mannitol; this occurred mainly among otherwise typical non-haemolytic strains that were rarely groupable.Only 12% of isolations from the bloodstream of patients suffering from systemic infections were beta haemolytic and only 18% possessed a group antigen, but a considerably greater proportion of those from visceral abscesses were beta haemolytic (28%). Among isolations from superficial lesions in some body sites there were considerably greater proportions of beta-haemolytic and groupable strains; thus, nearly one-half of those isolated from the abdomen other than the female genital tract were beta-haemolytic and over one-half were groupable. On the other hand, strains from the teeth and gums were nearly always non-haemolytic and ungroupable, and most vaginal isolations were of non-haemolytic strains with a wide sugar-fermentation pattern.
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