Two Cases of Bacteremia Due to Roseomonas mucosa

Ann Lab Med. 2016 Jul;36(4):367-370. doi: 10.3343/alm.2016.36.4.367.

Abstract

Roseomonas is a genus of pink-pigmented nonfermentative bacilli. These slow-growing, gram-negative cocobacilli form pink-colored colonies on sheep blood agar. They differ from other pink-pigmented nonfermenters, including Methylobacterium, in morphology, biochemical characteristics, and DNA sequence. Roseomonas strains are rarely isolated in clinical laboratories; therefore, we report two cases in order to improve our ability to identify these pathogens. We isolated two strains of Roseomonas mucosa from the venous blood cultures of two patients, an 84-yr-old woman with common bile duct obstruction and a 17-yr-old male with acute myeloid leukemia who had an indwelling central-venous catheter for chemotherapy. The isolated strains were confirmed as R. mucosa by 16S rRNA sequencing.

Keywords: 16S rRNA sequencing; Pink-pigmented nonfermenters; Roseomonas mucosa.

Publication types

  • Case Reports