Moraxella bovis is a Gram-negative, aerobic, oxidase-positive rod-shaped bacterium. It is the cause of infectious bovine keratoconjunctivitis, a contagious ocular disease of cattle,[1][2] referred to colloquially as pinkeye or New Forest eye.[3] M. bovis was first associated with pinkeye in cattle 1915 in Bengal, India[4]
The restriction enzyme MboI, widely used in biotechnology, is isolated from this species.[5]
References
- ^ George M. Garrity: Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. 2. Auflage. Springer, New York, 2005, Volume 2: The Proteobacteria, Par`t B: The Gammaproteobacteria
- ^ "Infectious Keratoconjunctivitis in Animals - Eye Diseases and Disorders".
- ^ "Moraxella bovis - microbewiki".
- ^ Mitter, SN (1915). "Contagious ophthalmia among cattle". Veterinary Journal. 71: 28–29.
- ^ Dreiseikelmann, Brigitte; Eichenlaub, Rudolf; Wackernagel, Wilfried (1979). "The effect of differential methylation by Escherichia coli of plasmid DNA and phage T7 and λ DNA on the cleavage by restriction endonuclease MboI from Moraxella bovis". Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Nucleic Acids and Protein Synthesis. 562 (3): 418–428. doi:10.1016/0005-2787(79)90105-9. PMID 378259.
External links
- Pink-eye in Beef Cattle - Department of Primary Industries
- Type strain of Moraxella bovis at BacDive - the Bacterial Diversity Metadatabase
- Culturing pinkeye lesions: Moraxella bovis vs. Moraxella ovis
You must be logged in to post a comment.