Biochemical characteristics of Providencia rettgeri
S.I. Paul et al. (2021)[3] isolated, characterized and identified salt tolerant Providencia rettgeri from marine sponge (Niphates erecta) of the Saint Martin's Island Area of the Bay of Bengal, Bangladesh. Colony, morphological, physiological, and biochemical characteristics of Providencia rettgeri are shown in the Table below.[3]
Test type
Test
Characteristics
Colony characters
Size
Small
Type
Round
Color
Opaque
Shape
Convex
Morphological characters
Shape
Rod
Physiological characters
Motility
+
Growth at 6.5% NaCl
+
Biochemical characters
Gram's staining
–
Oxidase
–
Catalase
+
Oxidative-Fermentative
Fermentative
Motility
+
Methyl Red
+
Voges-Proskauer
–
Indole
+
H2S Production
–
Urease
+
Nitrate reductase
+
β-Galactosidase
–
Hydrolysis of
Gelatin
–
Aesculin
–
Casein
–
Tween 40
–
Tween 60
–
Tween 80
–
Acid production from
Glycerol
+
Galactose
–
D-Glucose
+
D-Fructose
+
D-Mannose
+
Mannitol
+
N-Acetylglucosamine
+
Amygdalin
+
Maltose
+
D-Melibiose
+
D-Trehalose
+
Glycogen
+
D-Turanose
+
Note: + = Positive, – =Negative
Identification
P. rettgeri can be identified by its motility and its ability to produce acid from mannitol. It does not produce gas from glucose and does not ferment lactose. It also does not produce hydrogen sulfide or acid from xylose.
Providencia rettgeri is a natural pathogen of Drosophila fruit flies. Susceptibility to P. rettgeri is strongly tied to an allele of the antimicrobial peptide gene Diptericin.[7] The fly's defence against P. rettgeri seems to rely almost exclusively on Diptericin, as deletion of Diptericin leads to complete mortality. Meanwhile, deletion of multiple other antimicrobial peptides has no effect on P. rettgeri virulence. Yet defence against the related Providencia burhodogranariea is determined by multiple antimicrobial peptides beyond just Diptericin.[8]
References
^Hadley, Phillip (1908). The colon-typhoid intermediates as causative agents of disease in birds: The paratyphoid bacteria. RarebooksCLub. pp. 174–180. ISBN1236439406.
^Jackson, T.J.; Wang, Huayan; Nugent, Miriam J.; Griffin, Christine T.; Burnell, Ann M.; Dowds, Barbara C.A. (1995). "Isolation of insect pathogenic bacteria,Providencia rettgeri, from Heterorhabditis spp". Journal of Applied Bacteriology. 78 (3): 237–244. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2672.1995.tb05022.x.