Abstract

The effects of pH, yeast extract, and neopeptone on the production of extracellular proteinase and M protein by group A streptococci were studied with a type 1 strain capable of producing both M protein and proteinase. The strain DS 2036-66 grew moderately well in a semisynthetic broth. M protein was produced without adding peptides to the medium. When added to a medium with 1% glucose, yeast extract (0.1%) was found to stimulate both growth and proteinase formation. Limiting the glucose to 0.25% prevented a drop in pH below 6.7 and prevented proteinase formation. Although less growth occurred with limited glucose, M protein of high specific activity was produced with an actual increase in acid-extractable M protein during the stationary phase of growth. When the medium was buffered at pH 7.85 with tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane buffer, 0.5% neopeptone prevented proteinase formation. This was true even in the presence of 1% glucose and 0.1% yeast extract, which resulted in a fall in pH to about 4.8 by 48 hr. Growth was greater than in Todd Hewitt broth, but the specific activity of M protein was considerably less than that found in the medium with glucose limited to 0.25%. Neopeptone was found to have little direct action on crude streptococcal proteinase. Instead, the evidence suggested that neopeptone somehow prevents proteinase elaboration. Yeast extract, on the other hand, appears to stimulate proteinase elaboration. To prevent proteinase formation, neopeptone must be added early, during the logarithmic phase of growth or at the start. In contrast, when yeast extract was added as late as 24 hr, it resulted in the elaboration of extracellular proteinase and in the decline of M protein. When 38 M nontypable strains from the diagnostic laboratory were tested for proteinase activity under conditions similar to those used in the diagnostic laboratory, only six produced much proteinase.

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