Investigation of the effects of pH and bile on the growth of oral Campylobacter concisus strains isolated from patients with inflammatory bowel disease and controls.

This study examined the impact of pH and bile on the growth of oral C. concisus strains isolated from patients with IBD and controls. The growth of 58 C. concisus strains on horse blood agar (HBA) plates following exposure to media with various pH values for different time points were examined. Furthermore, the growth of C. concisus strains on HBA plates containing different concentrations of ox bile was investigated. Following exposure to pH 2 for 30 minutes, none of the 58 oral C. concisus strains grew on HBA plates. Following exposure to pH 3.5 for 30 minutes, only four of 20 oral strains examined grew on HBA plates, with a log10 c.f.u. reduction being 0.7-2.5 compared to the same strains without low pH exposure. Exposure to pH 5 for 120 minutes had minimal effects on C. concisus growth. Approximately half of the oral strains (55.2%, 32/58) grew on HBA containing 2% bile. Bile inhibited the growth of C. concisus in a dose and strain dependent manner. These data suggest that both bacterial and intestinal environmental factors may play a role in the determination of C. concisus colonization in the different parts of the gastrointestinal tract and that increased gastric pH and reduced intestinal bile may be risk factors for increased gastric and intestinal C. concisus colonization. PMID: 25657299 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Journal of Medical Microbiology - Category: Microbiology Authors: Tags: J Med Microbiol Source Type: research