Abstract

A survey of water samples to determine the efficacy of standard procedures for the isolation of environmental legionellae was conducted. Marked variations in intraspecies resistance to selective agents and treatments were observed, and in experiments with one of the isolates, the response was modified by culture conditions. Five selective procedures incorporating acid (pH 2.2) and heat (50 degrees C, 30 min) treatments, with and without plating on buffered charcoal-yeast extract agar supplemented with vancomycin (5 micrograms/ml), polymyxin B (60 U/ml), and cycloheximide (80 micrograms/ml), caused 5 to 99% decreases in viable counts of pure cultures in water suspensions. The differences in the responses of the cultures to the five treatments were statistically significant. Cells in retained samples of naturally contaminated water from which the original cultures had been isolated were significantly less sensitive than artificially grown isolates. The sensitivities of the laboratory-grown cells to the treatments were affected by the length of incubation on buffered charcoal-yeast extract agar. Whereas acid resistance increased after 24 h of incubation, resistance to the antibiotic mixture decreased.

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