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. 2012 Aug;18(8):1241. doi: 10.3201/eid1808.ET1808

Etymologia: Pseudomonas

PMCID: PMC3423701

Pseudomonas [soo′′do-mo′nəs]

From the Greek pseudo (“false”) + monas (“unit”). In 1894, German botanist Walter Migula coined the term Pseudomonas for a genus he described as, “Cells with polar organs of motility. Formation of spores occurs in some species, but it is rare.” Migula never clarified the etymology of the term. However, the description of Pseudomonas as “false unit” does not make much sense, and an alternative explanation posits that Migula “had not traced directly the Greek ancestry of the name, but had simply created the name Pseudomonas for the resemblance of the cells to those of the nanoflagellate Monas in both size and active motility.” Monas was coined by Danish naturist Otto Friedrich Müller in 1773 to describe a genus of “infusoria” characterized as “vermis inconspicuous, simplicissimus, pellucidus, punctiformis” (“inconspicuous worm, simple, transparent, tiny”).

Pseudomonas aeruginosa [adj. fem. of aerūginōsus] from Latin aerūgō (“copper rust or verdigris,” hence green) +‎ -ōsus (added to a noun to form an adjective indicating an abundance of that noun) is named for the greenish-blue color of bacterial colonies. The organism has emerged as one of the most serious causes of nosocomial infections.

Footnotes

Suggested citation for this article: Etymologia: Pseudomonas. Emerg Infect Dis [serial on the Internet]. 2012 Aug [date cited]. http://dx.doi.org/10.3201/eid1808.ET1808

Sources

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