TY - JOUR KW - Animals KW - Arthrobacter KW - Biological Assay KW - Chelating Agents KW - Edetic Acid KW - Growth Substances KW - Hydroxylamines KW - Metabolism KW - Mycobacterium KW - Mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis KW - Oxazoles KW - Pharmacology KW - Research AU - ANTOINE A D AU - MORRISON N E AU - HANKS J H AB -

Antoine, Alan D. (Johns Hopkins University-Leonard Wood Memorial Leprosy Research Laboratory, Baltimore, Md.), Norman E. Morrison, and John H. Hanks. Specificity of improved methods for mycobactin bioassay by Arthrobacter terregens. J. Bacteriol. 88:1672-1677. 1964.-Arthrobacter terregens was used to assay mycobactin, a growth factor for Mycobacterium paratuberculosis. Improved techniques permit the assay of mycobactin within 3 to 4 days by agarplate or liquid-medium methods. For the agarplate method, Arthrobacter terregens gave linear increases in zonal growth at mycobactin concentrations of 0.07 to 0.30 mug per spot; for the liquid-medium method, linear increases in turbidimetric growth occurred at 0.05 to 0.27 mug/ml. Specificity studies show that the mycobactin hydrolytic products, cobactin and mycobactic acid, function as growth stimulators, but the high concentrations required would produce only minimal interference in mycobactin assays. Furthermore, the response to mycobactic acid is characterized by a delayed response of 3 days. Various synthetic hydroxylamine-containing compounds and metalchelating agents cannot replace the biological activity of mycobactin. Diacetylmycobactin is 7.4 times more effective than mycobactin as a growth stimulator.

BT - Journal of bacteriology C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14240956?dopt=Abstract DA - 1964 Dec J2 - J. Bacteriol. LA - eng N2 -

Antoine, Alan D. (Johns Hopkins University-Leonard Wood Memorial Leprosy Research Laboratory, Baltimore, Md.), Norman E. Morrison, and John H. Hanks. Specificity of improved methods for mycobactin bioassay by Arthrobacter terregens. J. Bacteriol. 88:1672-1677. 1964.-Arthrobacter terregens was used to assay mycobactin, a growth factor for Mycobacterium paratuberculosis. Improved techniques permit the assay of mycobactin within 3 to 4 days by agarplate or liquid-medium methods. For the agarplate method, Arthrobacter terregens gave linear increases in zonal growth at mycobactin concentrations of 0.07 to 0.30 mug per spot; for the liquid-medium method, linear increases in turbidimetric growth occurred at 0.05 to 0.27 mug/ml. Specificity studies show that the mycobactin hydrolytic products, cobactin and mycobactic acid, function as growth stimulators, but the high concentrations required would produce only minimal interference in mycobactin assays. Furthermore, the response to mycobactic acid is characterized by a delayed response of 3 days. Various synthetic hydroxylamine-containing compounds and metalchelating agents cannot replace the biological activity of mycobactin. Diacetylmycobactin is 7.4 times more effective than mycobactin as a growth stimulator.

PY - 1964 SP - 1672 EP - 7 T2 - Journal of bacteriology TI - SPECIFICITY OF IMPROVED METHODS FOR MYCOBACTIN BIOASSAY BY ARTHROBACTER TERREGENS. VL - 88 SN - 0021-9193 ER -