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| __NOTOC__
| | #REDIRECT [[Bacillus anthracis]] |
| {{Anthrax}}
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| {{CMG}}; {{AE}} {{JS}}
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| ==Overview==
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| ==Taxonomy==
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| [[Bacterium|Bacteria]]; [[Archaebacteria]]; [[Firmicutes]]; [[Bacilli]]; [[Bacillales]]; [[Bacillaceae]]; [[Bacillus]]; anthracis; Bacillus anthracis
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| ==Biology==
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| {| style="float: right;"
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| | [[File:AnthraxCauses2.png|200px|thumb|none| Photomicrograph depicting a number of Gram-positive, endospore-forming Bacillus anthracis bacteria<SMALL>Courtesy: ''[http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/home.asp Public Health Image Library (PHIL), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)]''<ref>{{Cite web | title = http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details.asp | url = http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details.asp}}</ref></SMALL>]]
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| | [[File:AnthraxCauses1.jpg|200px|thumb|none| Scanning electron micrograph (SEM) depicted spores from the Sterne strain of Bacillus anthracis bacteria<SMALL>Courtesy: ''[http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/home.asp Public Health Image Library (PHIL), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)]''<ref>{{Cite web | title = http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details.asp | url = http://phil.cdc.gov/phil/details.asp}}</ref></SMALL>]]
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| [[B. anthracis]], the causative agent of anthrax, is a [[Gram-positive]], [[aerobic]] or facultatively anaerobic, [[endospore]]-forming, [[rod]]-shaped [[bacterium]] approximately 4 μm by 1 μm, although under the microscope it frequently appears in chains of [[cells]]. In [[blood smear]]s, smears of tissues or lesion fluid from diagnostic specimens, these chains are two to a few cells in length; in smears made from [[in vitro]] cultures, they can appear as endless strings of [[cells]] - responsible for the characteristic tackiness of the colonies and for the flocculating nature of broth cultures. Also characteristic is the square-ended appearance traditionally associated with [[B. anthracis]] vegetative cells, although this may not always be very clear. In the presence of [[oxygen]], and towards the end of the exponential phase of growth, one ellipsoidal [[spore]] (approximately 2 μm by 1 μm in size) is formed in each [[cell]]; this does not swell the [[sporangium]] and is generally situated centrally, sometimes sub terminally.<ref name=WHO>{{cite web | title = Anthrax in Humans and Animals | url = http://www.who.int/csr/resources/publications/anthrax_web.pdf }}</ref>
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| In the absence of [[oxygen]] and under a high partial pressure of Co2 in the presence of [[bicarbonate]], the vegetative [[cell]] secretes its [[polypeptide]] [[capsule]] and it is one of the two established [[in vivo]] [[virulence factor]]s of [[B. anthracis]]. The [[capsule]] is also a primary [[diagnostic]] aid.<ref name=WHO>{{cite web | title = Anthrax in Humans and Animals | url = http://www.who.int/csr/resources/publications/anthrax_web.pdf }}</ref>
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| ==Origin==
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| [[Anthrax]] is thought to have originated in Egypt and Mesopotamia. Many scholars think that in Moses’ time, during the 10 plagues of Egypt, [[anthrax]] may have caused what was known as the fifth [[plague]], described as a sickness affecting horses, cattle, sheep, camels and oxen.
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| ==Tropism==
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| ==Natural Reservoir==
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| [[Natural reservoir]]s of [[Bacillus anthracis]] includes:
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| * Humans
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| * Mammals
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| * Herbivores
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| * Reptiles
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| * Birds
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| ==References==
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| {{reflist|2}}
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