Brachybacterium rhamnosum
Appearance
Brachybacterium rhamnosum | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Bacteria |
Phylum: | Actinomycetota |
Class: | Actinomycetia |
Order: | Micrococcales |
Family: | Dermabacteraceae |
Genus: | Brachybacterium |
Species: | B. rhamnosum
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Binomial name | |
Brachybacterium rhamnosum Takeuchi et al. 1995
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Brachybacterium rhamnosum is a species of Gram positive, facultatively anaerobic, whitish yellow-pigmented bacterium. The cells are coccoid during the stationary phase, and irregular rods during the exponential phase. It was first isolated from corn steep liquor, and the species was proposed in 1995 along with Brachybacterium conglomeratum and B. paraconglomeratum. The name is derived from the fact that there is an abundance of the sugar rhamnose in the cell wall.[1]
References
[edit]- ^ Takeuchi, M.; Fang, C.-X.; Yokota, A. (1995). "Taxonomic Study of the Genus Brachybacterium: Proposal of Brachybacterium conglomeratum sp. nov., nom. rev., Brachybacterium paraconglomeratum sp. nov., and Brachybacterium rhamnosum sp. nov". International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. 45 (1): 160–168. doi:10.1099/00207713-45-1-160.
External links
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