Abstract

The frequency of conjugal transfer of the plasmid RP1 from two different Escherichia coli donor strains (HB101 and X7, RifR) to the same E. coli recipient strain (X7, NalR) was measured in vivo (germ free mice) and in vitro (intestinal extracts, caecal contents and laboratory liquid and agar media). The transfer frequencies of the plasmid from X7, RifR and HB101 in vivo were not significantly different from those obtained when using intestinal extracts or caecal contents. In contrast, compared to in vivo, a significant difference in frequency of transfer was obtained from one of the donors, X7, RifR when using laboratory liquid media (P 0.05). In contrast, when laboratory agar was used, the opposite occurred and the transfer was greater from HB101 than from X7, RifR (P 0.05) could be seen between the two donors. We conclude that the intestinal extracts and caecal contents better reflect the natural environment than any of the laboratory media tested for the parameter investigated. Furthermore, it is shown that transfer using laboratory agar did not reflect in vivo conditions. The data supports the concept of using sub-samples of an ecosystem as a microcosm for modelling the ecosystem.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call