The action of sodium deoxycholate on Escherichia coli.

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Abstract

Sodium deoxycholate is used in a number of bacteriological media for the isolation and classification of gram-negative bacteria from food and the environment. Initial experiments to study the effect of deoxycholate on the growth parameters of Escherichia coli showed an increase in the lag time constant and generation time and a decrease in the growth rate constant and total cell yield of this microorganism. Cell fractionation studies indicated that sodium deoxycholate at levels used in bacteriological media interferes with the incorporation of [U-14C]glucose into the cold-trichloroacetic acid-soluble, ethanol-soluble, and trypsin-soluble cellular fractions of E. coli. Finally, sodium deoxycholate interfered with the flagellation and motility of Proteus mirabilis and E. coli. It would appear then that further improvement of the deoxycholate medium may be in order.

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D’Mello, A., & Yotis, W. W. (1987). The action of sodium deoxycholate on Escherichia coli. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 53(8), 1944–1946. https://doi.org/10.1128/aem.53.8.1944-1946.1987

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