Yeastlike fungi from greater wax moth larvae (Galleria mellonella) fed antibiotics |
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Authors: | Jan Jarosz |
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Affiliation: | Institute of Biology, Maria Curie-Sk?odowska University, 20-033 Lublin, Akademicka 19, Poland |
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Abstract: | The effect of the antibiotics oxytetracycline, chloramphenicol, and penicillin on the gut flora of Galleria mellonella larvae was not only to suppress Streptococcus faecalis, a typical gut organism of all stages of the moth, but also simultaneously to cause an increase in the number of yeastlike fungi, Candida guilliermondi, Candida krusei, and Geotrichum candidum. Nystatin prevented or minimized yeast multiplication. Most pupae and adults were sterile or contained only S. faecalis, even when prepupae had contained many fungi. A combination of oxytetracycline-nystatin in a total dosage of 1 and 3 × MIC/cm2 of honeycomb surface, respectively, reduced both S. faecalis and fungal counts, so that after a 3-day incubation, most of the larvae were sterile or near sterile. |
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Keywords: | prepupae yeastlike fungi populations Geotrichum candidum oxytetracycline chloramphenicol penicillin nystatin |
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