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Before 2007, the single species name Enterobacter sakazakii was applied to these organisms.
Enterobacter as a group also have an inducible ampC gene.
The genus Enterobacter is a member of the coliform group of bacteria.
Enterobacter may also develop resistance by acquiring plasmids.
Cronobacter (formerly called Enterobacter sakazakii) is a group of bacteria that are found naturally in the environment.
A draft genome sequence of Enterobacter cloacae subsp.
The cause of the condition has been established to be the endotoxin shed by the bacteria Enterobacter agglomerans which colonizes cotton plants.
It is not active against Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Chlamydiae, or Enterobacter species.
Cronobacter is the officially recognised bacterial genus name for the organism which before 2007 was named Enterobacter sakazakii.
Enterobacter cloacae is a clinically significant Gram-negative, facultatively-anaerobic, rod-shaped bacterium.
These bacteria are called methyl-red-negative and include Serratia marcescens and Enterobacter aerogenes.
A more recent study has uncovered a potentially contributing role for Enterobacter cloacae B29 toward obesity and insulin resistance in a human patient.
Enterobacter cloacae is a member of the normal gut flora of many humans and is not usually a primary pathogen.
E: Enterobacter spp.
It is also active against some Enterobacter species, Morganella morganii, and Serratia species.
The first class C carbapenemase was described in 2006 and was isolated from a virulent strain of Enterobacter aerogenes.
It has now been found in many other strains of E. coli, as well as other bacteria common to the human gut, like Enterobacter.
Enterobacter aerogenes, a pathogenic bacterium commonly found in hospitals that causes opportunistic skin infections and impacts other body tissues.
The recalled products said to contain Enterobacter gergoviae or Burkholderia cepecia, which at most causes infections if applied to the eyes.
Other disease-causing bacteria in this family include Proteus, Enterobacter, Serratia, and Citrobacter.
Enterobacter cloacae has been used in a bioreactor-based method for the biodegradation of explosives and in the biological control of plant diseases.
Formerly called Enterobacter agglomerans, this bacterium is known to be an opportunistic pathogen in the immunocompromised, causing wound, blood, and urinary-tract infections.
The genus Enterobacter ferments lactose with gas production during a 48 hour incubation at 35-37 C in the presence of bile salts and detergents.
Additionally, resistance to ampicillin is seen in enterobacter, citrobacter, serratia, indole-positive proteus species, and other hospital-acquired gram negative infections.
Gram negative bacteria (Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Enterobacter species, Klebsiella species)