The ATCC Bacteriology Collection is the most diversified assemblage of prokaryotes in the world, containing more than 18,000 strains in more than 750 genera. Every important prokaryotic physiological group is represented. The Collection holds more than 3,600 type cultures of validly described species, forming the basis for systematic bacteriology, and nearly 500 bacteriophages. The Bacteriology catalog is divided into two subcollections. Please choose the appropriate one to find the strains you need.
The bacteria are useful in a variety of research and industrial applications. We have methicillin-resistant research materials; quality control organisms for commercial identification systems, a wide selection of extremophile strains from a variety of environmental sources and genomic DNA from well-characterized microbial strains suitable for amplification by PCR. (You can view these lists of specialized strains using Adobe Acrobat Reader.) Preceptrol® cultures offer an economical way to use well-characterized ATCC Genuine Cultures®. Most are packaged in serum vials for ease of use.
Genome Highlight
ATCC® BAA-1720™ Staphylococcus aureus subsp. aureus strain MRSA252 (GenBank BX571856) was a major source of hospital-acquired infections in the United Kingdom in the late 1990s. MRSA252 is a multi-drug resistant strain that has been typed as belonging to the EMRSA-16 clone by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and to sequence type (ST)36 by MLST.
ATCC® BAA-1721™ Staphylococcus aureus subsp. aureus strain MSSA476 (GenBank BX571857) is a hyper-virulent community acquired methicillin-susceptible (MSSA) strain isolated in the United Kingdom. MSSA476 is resistant to penicillin and fusidic acid, but susceptible to most commonly used antibiotics, including ciprofloxacin, tetracycline, erythromycin, gentamicin and methicillin. The strain has been assigned to ST1 by MLST. Check out the list of new methicillin-resistant, and methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus research materials.
ATCC now offers both fully-sequenced strains. (Image of Staphylococcus aureus subsp. aureus courtesy of Janice Carr, CDC, Atlanta, GA)
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