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J Clin Microbiol. 1990 September; 28(9): 1947-1951

Assessment of conventional and commercial methods for identification of clinical isolates of cysteine-requiring strains of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella species.

C J McIver and J W Tapsall

Department of Microbiology, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, New South Wales, Australia.

ABSTRACT

Cysteine-requiring strains of the family Enterobacteriaceae that are auxotrophic for this amino acid because of defects in the sulfur assimilatory pathway account for about 1.5% of urinary tract isolates of Escherichia coli and Klebsiella species. Forty Escherichia and eight Klebsiella cysteine-requiring strains were used to test the ease with which various test systems identified clinical isolates of cysteine auxotrophs. In a preliminary experiment, the growth yield of 10 cysteine-requiring E. coli in 10 solutions of commercially available peptones was in each instance less than that of prototrophic control and showed that these sources of nutrients were suboptimal for these strains. A significant proportion of the cysteine-requiring strains were not adequately identified by growth-dependent tests which used various peptones as a nutrient source. Problems were encountered with all test systems examined, which were as follows: conventional methods; the API 20E, Microbact, and Vitek systems; and two rapid methods for the identification of E. coli, the Rapidec coli and the beta-D-glucuronidase tests. The performance of the test systems was only partly improved when inocula were derived from appropriately supplemented media. However, the problems of the growth-dependent tests were resolved when a cysteine-supplemented suspension was used to inoculate each test system.


J Clin Microbiol. 1990 September; 28(9): 1947-1951







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