Chryseobacterium soli explained
Chryseobacterium soli is a bacterium. It is aerobic, Gram-negative, non-motile, yellow-pigmented and straight rod-shaped. Its type strain is JS6-6(T) (=KACC 12502(T)=DSM 19298(T)).[1]
Further reading
- Book: Dongyou Liu . Molecular Detection of Human Bacterial Pathogens . CRC Press . Boca Raton . 2011 . 978-1-4398-1238-9 .
- Whitman, William B., et al., eds. Bergey's manual® of systematic bacteriology. Vol. 4 and 5. Springer, 2012.
- Van Wyk, Esias Renier. Virulence Factors and Other Clinically Relevant Characteristics of Chryseobacterium Species. Diss. University of the Freee State, 2008.
- Book: Falkow, Stanley . Dworkin, Martin . The prokaryotes: a handbook on the biology of bacteria . Springer . Berlin . 2006 . 0-387-25497-8 .
External links
Notes and References
- Weon HY, Kim BY, Yoo SH, Kwon SW, Stackebrandt E, Go SJ . Chryseobacterium soli sp. nov. and Chryseobacterium jejuense sp. nov., isolated from soil samples from Jeju, Korea . . 58 . Pt 2 . 470–3 . February 2008 . 18218951 . 10.1099/ijs.0.65295-0 . free .