Two unusual budding bacteria isolated from a swimming pool

J Appl Bacteriol. 1984 Jun;56(3):479-86. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2672.1984.tb01376.x.

Abstract

Two unusual strains of budding bacteria were isolated on a Millipore Pseudomonas Count Water Tester during routine monitoring of Pseudomonas aeruginosa counts in a swimming pool. The first isolate has been identified as Blastobacter sp. It was a yellow-pigmented, Gram negative rod-shaped organism with a polar holdfast by which it attached to solid surfaces or other cells to form rosettes. The cells reproduced by asymmetric division or budding at the free pole of the cell, producing motile daughter cells with a single polar flagellum. The second isolate, which has not yet been identified, was a red-pigmented, Gram negative rod-shaped organism which produced one or more buds at each pole of the cell. Cell division appears to occur by both binary fission and by budding. Both organisms were strict aerobes, catalase and oxidase positive and did not produce acid from glucose in Hugh and Leifson medium.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria / isolation & purification*
  • Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria / metabolism
  • Gram-Negative Aerobic Bacteria / ultrastructure
  • Swimming Pools*
  • Water Microbiology*