Abstract

We have determined the cell wall composition, guanine-plus-cytosine (G+C) contents of the DNA, rRNA gene restriction patterns, and the levels of DNA-DNA relatedness of 11 strains identified biochemically as Centers for Disease Control (CDC) Corynebacterium group absolute nonfermenter 1 (Corynebacterium group ANF-1). For seven of these strains, growth is abundant on 5% sheep blood agar, which differentiates them from the four other strains, whose growth requires a lipid supplement such as Tween 80. Two of the lipid-requiring strains produced mucoid colonies on 1% Tween 80-supplemented sheep blood agar. All strains possess cell wall component type IV, short-chain mycolic acids, and G+C contents of DNA of 66 to 68 mol% as determined by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. DNA-relatedness experiments by an S1 nuclease procedure showed that nine of these strains, including two of the lipid-requiring strains, constitute a new genomic species less than 40% related to Corynebacterium species and other coryneform groups. The lipid-requiring strain T18502 exhibited 98% DNA relatedness with another lipid-requiring strain, T88593 (difference in thermal denaturation midpoint [delta Tm] = 2 degrees C) and 71 to 77% similarity with the nonlipophilic strains (delta Tm range of from to 5 degrees C). Conversely, the DNA relatedness between strain LCDC 88199 and the six other nonlipophilic strains ranged from 86 to 100% (delta Tm range of from 1 to 3 degrees C) and was only 73 and 76% with the lipophilic strains T18502 and T88593, respectively (delta Tm, 3 and 4 degrees C). These results indicated that these two cultural types of bacteria constitute two subspecies within the new genomic species.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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