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. 1979 Oct;38(4):637–641. doi: 10.1128/aem.38.4.637-641.1979

Effect of environmental stress on Clostridium difficile toxin levels during continuous cultivation.

A B Onderdonk, B R Lowe, J G Bartlett
PMCID: PMC243552  PMID: 44176

Abstract

A method for the continuous culture of Clostridium difficile has been described. It has been shown that subjecting continuous cultures of this microorganism to environmental stress results in increased levels of toxin in culture medium. Factors found to cause this release include alteration of the Eh from --360 to +100 mV or increasing the temperature from 37 to 45 degrees C. The increased toxin levels were not associated with a change in viable cell density or the numbers of spores present. Additional studies have shown that subinhibitory concentrations of vancomycin and penicillin, but not clindamycin, also cause an increase in toxin levels during continuous culture. The increase in supernatant toxin levels occurs concomitant with a decrease in sonicated cell extract toxin levels. The data suggest that a number of factors can cause a release of toxin from C. difficile into the surrounding medium.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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