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Journal of Bacteriology logoLink to Journal of Bacteriology
. 1968 Oct;96(4):1037–1041. doi: 10.1128/jb.96.4.1037-1041.1968

Cell Wall Composition of Hyphomicrobium Species1

H E Jones 1,2, Peter Hirsch 1
PMCID: PMC252415  PMID: 5685989

Abstract

Chemical analysis of cell walls obtained from Hyphomicrobium B-522 and from a morphologically and nutritionally distinct organism, Hyphomicrobium neptunium (ATCC 15444), showed that the organisms have a similar cell wall composition, which is typical of gram-negative bacteria. The walls of both strains contained many amino acids, including the characteristic mucopeptide components diaminopimelic acid and muramic acid. Isolation of the mucopeptide by use of sodium dodecyl sulfate was successful only with cell walls of H. neptunium, thus revealing a difference between the walls of the two strains. The mucopeptide preparation contained glucosamine, muramic acid, alanine, glutamic acid, diaminopimelic acid, and glycine in molar ratios of 1.05:1.21:1.84:1.0:1.04:0.31, respectively. The concentration of glycine was sufficiently high to suggest that it is a mucopeptide component rather than an impurity.

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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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