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Revision as of 10:46, 22 September 2016 by S4302999 (talk | contribs) (→‎Species)

Saeed Jami Bench ID 22/09/16 [1]

Classification

Higher order taxa

Bacteria – Firmicutes – Negativicutes – Selenomonadales – Veillonellaceae – Veillonella

Species

Veillonella parvula

Type Strain: Prevot Te 3, ATCC 10790 T, CCUG 5123 T, NCTC 11810 T

Description and significance

French biologist Adrein Veillon, whom the species is named after, first discovered the species in 1898. Veillonella parvula is a gram negative bacteria found in microenvironments of the human body, commonly described in human intestinal, oral and vaginal microflora. Despite being part of the Firmicutes phyla, majority of which are gram positive, Veillonella has a peculiar gram negative cell wall known of the Negativicutes class. V. parvula essentially anaerobic and auxotrophic; it is also lactate fermenting, cocci shaped and small in size at 0.3-0.5 μm.


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 [1], [2]

Genome structure

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

Cell structure and metabolism

Cell wall, biofilm formation, motility, metabolic functions.

Ecology

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

This page is written by Saeed Jami for the MICR3004 course, Semester 2, 2016