| Acetobacteraceae (2) | |
| Anaplasmataceae (1) | |
| Bacteroidaceae (8) | |
| Bartonella (8) | |
| Brucella (7) | |
| Campylobacter (27) | |
| Chlamydiales (3) | |
| Enterobacteriaceae (5) | |
| Escherichia (196) | |
| Gram-negative bacteria (3) | |
| Helicobacter (3) | |
| Klebsiella (3) | |
| Pasteurella (1) | |
| Proteus (5) | |
| Pseudomonadaceae (41) | |
| Pseudomonadales (1) | |
| Rhizobiaceae (13) | |
| Rickettsieae (2) | |
| Salmonella (106) | |
| Serratia (1) | |
| Shigella (2) | |
| Veillonellaceae (1) | |
| Vibrio (2) | |
| Xenorhabdus (2) | |
| Zymomona (1) |
and one had an unusual pattern of bioactivity against Gram-negative bacteria that suggests a potentially new mode of action.
Of 175 very-low-birth-weight infants 23 (13 percent) developed sepsis from gram-positive bacteria such as staphylococci Streptococcus and Enterococcus species and gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli
These samples were tested for the presence of ESBL-producing Enterobacteriaceae a family of gram-negative bacteria that includes Salmonella E coli and Klebsiella.
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