Muñoz-Elías Ernesto J, McKinney John D
Laboratory of Infection Biology, The Rockefeller University, New York, NY 10021, USA.
Cell Microbiol. 2006 Jan;8(1):10-22. doi: 10.1111/j.1462-5822.2005.00648.x.
Bacterial metabolism has been studied intensively since the first observations of these 'animalcules' by Leeuwenhoek and their isolation in pure cultures by Pasteur. Metabolic studies have traditionally focused on a small number of model organisms, primarily the Gram negative bacillus Escherichia coli, adapted to artificial culture conditions in the laboratory. Comparatively little is known about the physiology and metabolism of wild microorganisms living in their natural habitats. For approximately 500-1000 species of commensals and symbionts, and a smaller number of pathogenic bacteria, that habitat is the human body. Emerging evidence suggests that the metabolism of bacteria grown in vivo differs profoundly from their metabolism in axenic cultures.
自从列文虎克首次观察到这些“微生物”以及巴斯德将它们分离到纯培养物中以来,人们对细菌代谢进行了深入研究。传统上,代谢研究主要集中在少数几种模式生物上,主要是革兰氏阴性杆菌大肠杆菌,它适应实验室中的人工培养条件。对于生活在自然栖息地的野生微生物的生理学和代谢,人们了解得相对较少。对于大约500 - 1000种共生菌和共生体以及数量较少的病原菌来说,它们的栖息地就是人体。新出现的证据表明,体内生长的细菌的代谢与它们在无菌培养中的代谢有很大不同。