Mycobacterium leprae

Mycobacterium leprae
Scientific classification
Domain:Bacteria
Phylum:Actinobacteria
Order:Actinomycetales
Family:Mycobacteriaceae
Genus:Mycobacterium
Species:leprae
Binomial name
Mycobacterium leprae
,

Mycobacterium leprae, also known as Hansen’s bacillus, is the bacterium that causes leprosy (now called Hansen's disease). It is an intracellular, pleomorphic, but usually rod shaped, acid fast, gram positive, aerobic only remotely and only morphologically related to Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

Optical microscopy shows clumps, rounded masses, or in groups of bacilli side by side.

It was discovered in 1873 by the Norwegian physician Gerhard Henrik Armauer Hansen, who was searching for the bacteria in the skin nodules of patients with leprosy.

It has not been possible to culture Mycobacterium leprae on artificial culture media, but it can be cultivated transiently in the mouse footpad.

This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by [ expanding it].

Links






Google
Home   Alphabetical Listing   Quote


This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.