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Corynebacteria are a diverse group Gram-positive bacteria found in
a range of different ecological niches such as soil, vegetables,
sewage, skin, and cheese smear. Some, such as Corynebacterium
diphtheriae, are important pathogens while others, such as
Corynebacterium glutamicum, are of immense industrial importance.
In fact, C. glutamicum is one of the biotechnologically most
important bacterial species in use today with an annual production
of more than two million tons of amino acids, mainly L-glutamate
and L-lysine. Due to its industrial importance, C. glutamicum has
been studied extensively over the years, and the publication of the
C. glutamicum genome sequence in 2003 provided renewed impetus to
these studies. To date, the complete genome sequences of four
different species have been published, and sequencing of at least
two more species is ongoing. These genomic data have enabled a
dramatic improvement in our understanding of the corynebacterial
genome architecture, metabolic p
"Corynebacterium diphtheriae" is the classical etiological agent
of diphtheria and the type strain of the genus "Corynebacterium."
While diphtheria of the respiratory tract became rare with the
introduction of vaccination programs in industrialized countries,
even today several thousand cases per year are reported to the
World Health Organization. This shows that diphtheria is not
completely eradicated and that reservoirs exist. The book
summarizes the latest advances made in understanding "C.
diphtheriae" and the closely related species "Corynebacterium
ulcerans" and" Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis." Topics
addressed are genomics of toxigenic corynebacteria,
host-pathogen-interaction, detection, surveillance and treatment as
well as application aspects.
Corynebacterium diphtheriae is the classical etiological agent of
diphtheria and the type strain of the genus Corynebacterium. While
diphtheria of the respiratory tract became rare with the
introduction of vaccination programs in industrialized countries,
even today several thousand cases per year are reported to the
World Health Organization. This shows that diphtheria is not
completely eradicated and that reservoirs exist. The book
summarizes the latest advances made in understanding C. diphtheriae
and the closely related species Corynebacterium ulcerans and
Corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis. Topics addressed are genomics
of toxigenic corynebacteria, host-pathogen-interaction, detection,
surveillance and treatment as well as application aspects.
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