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==Description and significance==
==Description and significance==


Give a general description of the species (e.g. where/when was it first discovered, where is it commonly found, has it been cultured, functional role, type of bacterium [Gram+/-], morphology, etc.) and explain why it is important to study this microorganism. Examples of citations <sup>[[#References|[1]]]</sup>, <sup>[[#References|[2]]]</sup>
Give a general description of the species (e.g. where/when was it first discovered, where is it commonly found, has it been cultured, functional role, type of bacterium [Gram+/-], morphology, etc.) and explain why it is important to study this microorganism.


Type of bacterium: Gram - positive, non-sporogenic, non-motile
Type of bacterium: Gram - positive, non-sporogenic, non-motile


Morphology: Coccoid to rod-shaped. Younger colonies are round, convex, smooth or creamy and potentially resembling corynebacteria and staphylococci. Mature colonies may be raised and highly convoluted. <sup>[[#References|[4]]]</sup>
Morphology: Coccoid to rod-shaped. Younger colonies are round, convex, smooth or creamy and potentially resembling corynebacteria and staphylococci. Mature colonies may be raised and highly convoluted. <sup>[[#References|[4]]]</sup>
First discovered:


Commonly found: Mouth and respiratory tract  
Commonly found: Mouth and respiratory tract  
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Cell wall, biofilm formation, motility, metabolic functions.
Cell wall, biofilm formation, motility, metabolic functions.
Cell wall:
Biofilm formation:
Motility:
Metabolic functions:


Reactions: catalase production, nitrate and nitrite reduction, esculin hydrolysis and acid production from glucose, sucrose, maltose, salicin and  glycerol. <sup>[[#References|[3]]]</sup>
Reactions: catalase production, nitrate and nitrite reduction, esculin hydrolysis and acid production from glucose, sucrose, maltose, salicin and  glycerol. <sup>[[#References|[3]]]</sup>
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Aerobic <sup>[[#References|[4]]]</sup>
Aerobic <sup>[[#References|[4]]]</sup>


Habitat: Oral cavity  
Habitat: Oral cavity, other potential environments??


Microbe-host interactions:
Microbe-host interactions:

Revision as of 13:27, 5 September 2016

Rothia dentocariosa
Name: Alexandria Chin
Bench ID: Bench C
Date: 17 November 2024 [1]

Classification

Higher order taxa

Kingdom – Domain – Phylum – Class – Order – Family – Genus
Bacteria – Terrabacteria group – Actinobacteria – Actinobacteria – Micrococcales – Micrococcaceae – Rothia [1]

Species

Species name and type strain (consult LPSN http://www.bacterio.net/index.html for this information)

Rothia dentocariosa, strain ATCC 17931 [2]

Description and significance

Give a general description of the species (e.g. where/when was it first discovered, where is it commonly found, has it been cultured, functional role, type of bacterium [Gram+/-], morphology, etc.) and explain why it is important to study this microorganism.

Type of bacterium: Gram - positive, non-sporogenic, non-motile

Morphology: Coccoid to rod-shaped. Younger colonies are round, convex, smooth or creamy and potentially resembling corynebacteria and staphylococci. Mature colonies may be raised and highly convoluted. [4]

First discovered:

Commonly found: Mouth and respiratory tract

Cultured: yes

Functional role:

Importance: Morphologically similar to Actinomyces and Nocardia genus, which contain pathogenic members. [3]

Genome structure

Select a strain for which genome information (e.g. size, plasmids, distinct genes, etc.) is available.

Strain: ATCC17931

SIze: 2,506,025 bp

Plasmids:

Genes: Total - 2281, Protein - 2217, RNA - 64

Cell structure and metabolism

Cell wall, biofilm formation, motility, metabolic functions.

Cell wall:

Biofilm formation:

Motility:

Metabolic functions:

Reactions: catalase production, nitrate and nitrite reduction, esculin hydrolysis and acid production from glucose, sucrose, maltose, salicin and glycerol. [3]

Ecology

Aerobe/anaerobe, habitat (location in the oral cavity, potential other environments) and microbe/host interactions.

Aerobic [4]

Habitat: Oral cavity, other potential environments??

Microbe-host interactions:

Pathology

Do these microorganisms cause disease in the oral cavity or elsewhere?

Application to biotechnology

Bioengineering, biotechnologically relevant enzyme/compound production, drug targets,…

Current research

Summarise some of the most recent discoveries regarding this species.

References

  1. MICR3004

1. NCBI Taxonomy Browser

2. List of Prokaryotic Names with Standing in Nomenclature

3. Brown, J.M., Georg, L.K., and Waters, L.C. (1969) Laboratory Identification of Rothia dentocariosa and Its Occurrence in Human Clinical Materials. Applied Microbiology 17(1): 150-156.

4. Ferraz, V., McCarthy, K., Smith, D., Koornhof, HJ. (1998) Rothia dentocariosa endocarditis and aortic root abscess. Journal of Infection 37(3): 292-295


This page is written by Alexandria Chin for the MICR3004 course, Semester 2, 2016