Flagellated Actinomycetes
Open Access
- 1 April 1967
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 93 (4), 1446-1451
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.93.4.1446-1451.1967
Abstract
Shadowed motile elements from actinomycetes were observed with an electron microscope. Included were three strains of Actinoplanes, two of Ampullariella, two of Dermatophilus, two of Spirillospora, and four of “Nocardia” turbata. In addition, three types of previously undescribed actionmycetes were represented: (i) the C4 group (four strains) forming substrate mycelium breaking into motile rods; (ii) strain 9-41, forming Microellobosporia-like sporangia with motile spores; and (iii) strain P2, forming aerial hyphae releasing motile cocci when put in water. All the known chemical cell wall types of actinomycetes except the Nocardia asteroides type and the Actinomyces israeli type were represented in this array of motile actinomycetes. Motile elements were, depending on the genus, cocci, rods (often curved), or pyriform. Flagella were always in tufts (or single), never peritrichous. A relationship seems to exist between the location of the tuft and the cell wall composition. The spores of one strain of Actinoplanes were herniated, thus resembling plasmoptysis forms of bacteria. ImagesThis publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
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