Peptococcus

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Peptococcus
Scientific classification
Domain:
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Genus:
Peptococcus

Kluyver and van Niel 1936
Type species
Peptococcus niger
(Hall 1930) Kluyver & van Niel 1936
Species
  • P. niger
  • P. simiae

Peptococcus is a Gram-positive bacterium genus in the family Peptococcaceae.

Contents

Species in the genus are part of the human microbiome, especially in the bacteria that form the gut flora. They are part of the flora of the mouth, upper respiratory tract and large intestine.

Mezlocillin is an antibiotic that is effective against Peptococcus species.

Peptococcus niger is the only species left in the genus. All others have been moved to Peptostreptococcus . [1]

See also

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Finegoldia is a genus of Gram-positive bacteria. They are anaerobic cocci of the class Clostridia, with Finegoldia magna being the type species. F. magna was formerly known, along with several other Gram-positive anaerobic cocci (GPACs), as Peptostreptococcus magnus, but was moved into its own genus in 1999. The name is in honor of Sydney M. Finegold, an American microbiologist, while magna is Latin for large. It is an opportunistic human pathogen that normally colonizes skin and mucous membranes. It is often seen in biofilms on chronic ulcers such as in diabetic foot or decubitus ulcers. Most surveys have found it to be susceptible to penicillins, carbapenems and metronidazole, though resistant strains have been identified. Resistance to clindamycin is common and has been seen in over 10% of isolates in the US. One review stated that "the combination of diminished antimicrobial susceptibility, its prevalence, and the described virulence factors gives F. magna a special position among the GPAC."

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References

  1. EZAKI*, TAKAYUKI; YAMAMOTO, NAOKI; NINOMIYA, KEIU; SUZUKI, SHOICHIRO; YABUUCHI, EIKOYR 1983 (1983). "Transfer of Peptococcus indolicus, Peptococcus asaccharolyticus, Peptococcus prevotii, and Peptococcus magnus to the Genus Peptostreptococcus and Proposal of Peptostreptococcus tetradius sp. nov". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 33 (4): 683–698. doi: 10.1099/00207713-33-4-683 . ISSN   1466-5034.