African Journal of Biotechnology
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African
Journal of Biotechnology Vol. 1 (1), pp. 10-16, November 2002 ISSN 1684-5315 © 2002 Academic Journals
Accepted 9 September 2002 |
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| Abstract | |||||
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Swarming motility, a multicellular behaviour
characterized by periodic concentric growth on solid media has severally
been reported as a constraint in the clinical investigation of
mixed-culture infections involving Proteus and as a requirement for
virulence. While media are being formulated to restrain swarming in this
organism, the roles played by amino acids in the biogenesis of swarming
have not been fully clarified. The effects of 20 amino acids on swarming,
extracellular protease activity, cellular RNA level and total protein
concentration in 20 clinical Proteus strains from Lagos, Nigeria
were investigated. At 0.5mM concentration, glutamine, serine, and
methionine were the only amino acids found to enhance swarming motility on
M9 minimal medium (7.1–11.3 mm), cause significant increases in protease
activity (33.7–48.3 units/ml), total protein concentration (22.5–28.6
mg/ml) and cellular RNA concentration (192.8–264.7 mg/ml)
when compared to values obtained for other 17 amino acids (P < 0.05).
Furthermore, the amino acid induced swarming in these strains was found to
vary directly and significantly (P < 0.05) with protease activity and
cellular RNA concentration. The exclusion of methionine, serine and
glutamine when supplementing antiswarming media for clinical investigation
of Proteus - associated polymicrobial infections in Nigeria is
suggested.
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