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jem Home » 1941 Archive » 1 May » 73 (5): 629
Article

THE PRODUCTION OF BACTERICIDAL SUBSTANCES BY AEROBIC SPORULATING BACILLI

René J. Dubos, Rollin D. Hotchkiss
René J. Dubos
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Rollin D. Hotchkiss
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DOI: 10.1084/jem.73.5.629 | Published May 1, 1941
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Abstract

Several species of aerobic sporulating bacilli recently isolated from soil, sewage, manure, and cheese, as well as authentic strains obtained from type culture collections, have been found to exhibit antagonistic activity against unrelated microorganisms.

Cultures of these aerobic sporulating bacilli yield an alcohol-soluble, water-insoluble fraction,—tyrothricin,—which is bactericidal for most Gram-positive and Gram-negative microbial species.

Two different crystalline products have been separated from tyrothricin. One, which may be called tyrocidine, is bactericidal in vitro for both Gram-positive and Gram-negative species; the other substance, gramicidin, is effective only against Gram-positive microorganisms. In general, tyrocidine behaves like a protoplasmic poison and like other antiseptics, loses much of its activity in the presence of animal tissues. Gramicidin on the contrary exerts a much more subtle physiological effect on the susceptible bacterial cells and, when applied locally at the site of the infection, retains in vivo a striking activity against Gram-positive microorganisms.

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    • Submitted: 29 January 1941
© 1941 Rockefeller University Press
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THE PRODUCTION OF BACTERICIDAL SUBSTANCES BY AEROBIC SPORULATING BACILLI
René J. Dubos, Rollin D. Hotchkiss
Journal of Experimental Medicine May 1941, 73 (5) 629-640; DOI: 10.1084/jem.73.5.629

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The Journal of Experimental Medicine: 216 (2)

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February 4, 2019
Volume 216, No. 2

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Print ISSN: 0022-1007

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