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Comparative Study
. 1995 Jul;172(1):273-6.
doi: 10.1093/infdis/172.1.273.

Enterococcus faecalis cytolysin without effect on the intestinal growth of susceptible enterococci in mice

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Comparative Study

Enterococcus faecalis cytolysin without effect on the intestinal growth of susceptible enterococci in mice

M M Huycke et al. J Infect Dis. 1995 Jul.

Abstract

A murine model was developed to determine whether the Enterococcus faecalis cytolysin, through its bacteriolytic action on gram-positive bacteria, could promote intestinal overgrowth of cytolytic strains. Sets of E. faecalis strains with varying cytolytic production and susceptibility to cytolytic activity were mixed 1:1 and allowed to compete in vitro in broth or in vivo after orogastric administration in mice pretreated with antibiotics. In general, cytolytic strains outgrew, by as much as 2000-fold, competing cytolysin-susceptible or -hypersusceptible strains in vitro. In contrast, no growth advantage was observed in vivo, despite similar transient colonization of the murine intestinal tract by both cytolytic and cytolysin-susceptible strains. These data suggest that cytolysin plays little role in promoting intestinal overgrowth of enterococci through bacteriolytic activity.

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