Weeksella Explained
Weeksella is a Gram-negative, aerobic and non-motile genus of bacteria from the family of Weeksellaceae.[1] [2] [3] [4] Strains from the species Weeksella occurs in the female genital tract and male genital tract.[5] [6] [7]
Notes and References
- Weeksella Spp. . www.infektionsnetz.at .
- Weeksella . www.uniprot.org .
- Taxonomy of the genus Weeksella Holmes et al. 1987 . 2009. 10.1601/tx.8202. Parker. Charles Thomas. Wigley. Sarah. Garrity. George M.. 2024-04-17 . Charles Thomas. Parker. George M. Garrity.
- Book: Cowan . Samuel Tertius . Cowan and Steel's Manual for the Identification of Medical Bacteria . 1993 . Cambridge University Press . 978-0-521-54328-6 . 117 . en.
- Book: Corry . Janet E. L. . Curtis . Gordon D. W. . Baird . R. M. . Handbook of Culture Media for Food and Water Microbiology . 7 December 2011 . Royal Society of Chemistry . 978-1-84755-145-0 . 537 . en.
- Book: Darai . Gholamreza . Handermann . Michaela . Sonntag . Hans-Günther . Zoller . L. . Tidona . Christian A. . Lexikon der Infektionskrankheiten des Menschen: Erreger, Symptome, Diagnose, Therapie und Prophylaxe ; mit 43 Tabellen . 2009 . Springer Science & Business Media . 978-3-540-39005-3 . 315 . de.
- Reina . J . Gil . J . Salva . F . Gomez . J . Alomar . P . Microbiological characteristics of Weeksella virosa (formerly CDC group IIf) isolated from the human genitourinary tract. . Journal of Clinical Microbiology . October 1990 . 28 . 10 . 2357–2359 . 10.1128/JCM.28.10.2357-2359.1990 . 2229364 . 268178 . 0095-1137.