Mycobacterium psychrotolerans

Mycobacterium psychrotolerans is a rapidly growing mycobacterium first isolated from pond water near a uranium mine in Spain. It was able to grow at 4°C and is therefore considered to be psychrotolerant. Etymology: psychros, cold; tolerans, tolerating.

Mycobacterium psychrotolerans
Scientific classification
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M. psychrotolerans
Binomial name
Mycobacterium psychrotolerans
Trujillo et al. 2004, DSM 44697

Description

Microscopy

Colony characteristics

  • Smooth, entire, bright orange, scotochromogenic colonies appear after 2 days in GYEA, Bennett’s and nutrient agars.

Physiology

  • Growth on Lowenstein–Jensen agar is moderate.
  • No growth occurs on MacConkey agar.
  • Grows at 4–37C and tolerates 7% NaCl.
  • The type strain is resistant to ampicillin, cefuroxime, cloxacillin, erythromycin, penicillin and polymyxin. Sensitive to ciprofloxacin, gentamicin, neomycin and oxytetracycline.

Differential characteristics

  • Growth at 4°C.

Pathogenesis

  • First isolated from an environmental source, not known to be pathogenic.

Type strain

  • The type strain was isolated from a pond in Salamanca, Spain.
  • Strain WA101 = DSM 44697 = JCM 13323 = LMG 21953

References

    • Trujillo M.E.,et al., 2004. Mycobacterium psychrotolerans sp. nov., isolated from pond water near a uranium mine. Int. J. Syst. Evol. Microbiol., 54, 1459–1463. PMID 15388695


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