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Francisella is a genus of pathogenic, Gram-negative bacteria. They are small coccobacillary or rod-shaped, non-motile organisms, which are also facultative intracellular parasites of macrophages. Strict aerobes, Francisella colonies bear a morphological resemblance to those of the genus Brucella.

Pathogenesis


The type species, F. tularensis, causes the disease tularemia or rabbit fever. F. novicida and F. philomiragia (previously Yersinia philomiragia) are associated with septicemia and invasive systemic infections. It should be noted that the taxonomy of the genus is somewhat uncertain, especially in the case of F. novicida (may be a subspecies of F. tularensis). In general, identification of species is accomplished by biochemical profiling or 16S rRNA sequencing.

Laboratory chracteristics


While Francisella organisms can survive for several weeks in the environment, they can be difficult to culture and maintain in the lab. Growth is slow (though increased by CO2 supplementation) and the organisms are fastidious, with most Francisella strains requiring cystine and cysteine media supplementation for growth. Growth has been successful on several media types, including chocolate agar and Thayer-Martin medias with appropriate additives as noted above. Attempted isolation on MacConkey agar is not reliable or generally successful.

After 24 hours of incubation on appropriate solid media, Francisella colonies are generally small (1 - 2 mm), opaque, and white-gray to bluish-gray in color. Colonies are smooth, with clean edges and, after a 48 hours of growth, tend to have a shiny surface.

References


Proteobacteria

Francisella tularensis

Francisella in Cod Observer UK

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Francisella".

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