muramidase and thallium-acetate

muramidase has been researched along with thallium-acetate* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for muramidase and thallium-acetate

ArticleYear
Improvement of a selective media for the isolation of B. anthracis from soils.
    Journal of microbiological methods, 2009, Volume: 79, Issue:3

    To prove linkage between an environmental sample and an anthrax case, there must be isolates obtained from both that can be compared. Although Bacillus anthracis is easily isolated from powder samples, isolating it from soil is difficult because of the high bacterial count in it. Formulations of PLET were prepared, inoculated with B. anthracis, B. cereus and B. thuringiensis and examined for growth. Two hundred eighty-three isolates including 23 B. anthracis were placed onto one formulation while MICs against trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole were determined. The media supported B. anthracis growth at 30 degrees C and inhibited almost all other bacterial growth, including closely-related species. Sensitivity for B. anthracis and selectivity against other Bacillus and against non-Bacillus were 96.8%, 100% and 97.2% respectively. Isolates that grew had MICs >4 and >76 microg mL(-1) against trimethoprim and sulfamethoxazole, respectively. Soils spiked with 10(2)B. anthracis spores and suspended in PLET broth yielded a 6-7 log(10) increase in B. anthracis. Other growth was inhibited. PLET supplemented with sulfamethoxazole (38 microg mL(-1)), trimethoprim (2 microg mL(-1)), polymyxin B (15,000 U L(-1)), and lysozyme (150,000 U L(-1)) can successfully select for B. anthracis and will facilitate agricultural, environmental and forensic investigations of B. anthracis isolates.

    Topics: Anti-Bacterial Agents; Bacillus; Bacillus anthracis; Bacterial Typing Techniques; Culture Media; Edetic Acid; Microbial Sensitivity Tests; Muramidase; Organometallic Compounds; Polymyxins; Sensitivity and Specificity; Soil Microbiology

2009
Evaluation of spore extraction and purification methods for selective recovery of viable Bacillus anthracis spores.
    Letters in applied microbiology, 2001, Volume: 33, Issue:2

    To investigate methods of improving anthrax spore detection with PLET.. Comparisons were made of PLET and blood-supplemented PLET to recover and distinguish spores of a variety of Bacillus species. Heat and ethanol purification of spores, and spore extraction from soil with water and high specific gravity sucrose plus non-ionic detergent, were also carried out.. PLET was more selective and suitable than blood-supplemented PLET for detection of anthrax spores in the environmental specimens. However, PLET is not an optimal spore recovery medium. Purification of spores with ethanol was as effective as heat purification. High specific gravity sucrose plus detergent extraction solutions may be more sensitive than extraction with water.. This study highlights shortcomings with the standard PLET isolation of anthrax spores and describes ways in which the procedure may be improved.

    Topics: Bacillus anthracis; Cell Division; Culture Media; Edetic Acid; Ethanol; Hot Temperature; Muramidase; Organometallic Compounds; Polyethylene Glycols; Polymyxins; Sensitivity and Specificity; Soil Microbiology; Spores, Bacterial; Sucrose; Water

2001