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1. Mycobacterium immunogenum sp. nov., a novel species related to Mycobacterium abscessus and associated with clinical disease, pseudo-outbreaks and contaminated metalworking fluids: an international cooperative study on mycobacterial taxonomy.

2. Mycobacterium wolinskyi sp. nov. and Mycobacterium goodii sp. nov., two new rapidly growing species related to Mycobacterium smegmatis and associated with human wound infections: a cooperative study from the International Working Group on Mycobacterial Taxonomy.

3. Clinical application of PCR-restriction enzyme pattern analysis for rapid identification of aerobic actinomycete isolates.

4. Recognition of a Nocardia transvalensis complex by resistance to aminoglycosides, including amikacin, and PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis.

5. Rapid identification of clinically significant species and taxa of aerobic actinomycetes, including Actinomadura, Gordona, Nocardia, Rhodococcus, Streptomyces, and Tsukamurella isolates, by DNA amplification and restriction endonuclease analysis.

6. DNA amplification and restriction endonuclease analysis for differentiation of 12 species and taxa of Nocardia, including recognition of four new taxa within the Nocardia asteroides complex.

7. Amplification and cloning of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis dnaA gene.

8. New Nocardia taxon among isolates of Nocardia brasiliensis associated with invasive disease.

9. PCR amplification and restriction endonuclease analysis of a 65-kilodalton heat shock protein gene sequence for taxonomic separation of rapidly growing mycobacteria.

10. A case of recurrent typhoid fever in the United States: importance of the grandmother connection and the use of large restriction fragment pattern analysis of genomic DNA for strain comparison.

11. Tetracycline resistance determinants in Mycobacterium and Streptomyces species.

12. Initial clarithromycin monotherapy for Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare complex lung disease.

13. Identification of mutations in 23S rRNA gene of clarithromycin-resistant Mycobacterium intracellulare.

14. Partial characterization of Nocardia farcinica beta-lactamases.

15. A membrane-bound precursor beta-lactamase in strains of Moraxella catarrhalis and Moraxella nonliquefaciens that produce periplasmic BRO-1 and BRO-2 beta-lactamases.

16. Isoelectric focusing patterns of beta-lactamases in the rapidly growing mycobacteria.

17. beta-Lactamase inhibitors and the inducibility of the beta-lactamase of Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

18. Mercuric reductase activity and evidence of broad-spectrum mercury resistance among clinical isolates of rapidly growing mycobacteria.

19. Acquired resistance of Nocardia brasiliensis to clavulanic acid related to a change in beta-lactamase following therapy with amoxicillin-clavulanic acid.

20. Clinical disease, drug susceptibility, and biochemical patterns of the unnamed third biovariant complex of Mycobacterium fortuitum.

21. Cefotaxime-resistant Nocardia asteroides strains are isolates of the controversial species Nocardia farcinica.

22. Genetic basis of tetracycline resistance in Moraxella (Branhamella) catarrhalis.

23. Antibiotic susceptibilities and drug resistance in Moraxella (Branhamella) catarrhalis.

24. Beta-lactam resistance in Nocardia brasiliensis is mediated by beta-lactamase and reversed in the presence of clavulanic acid.

25. In vitro drug sensitivity of M. avium-intracellulare complex in the presence and absence of dimethyl sulphoxide.

26. Selecting drug combinations for treatment of drug-resistant mycobacterial diseases.

27. Primary immune responsiveness and other observations in mice given oral dimethyl sulfoxide.

28. Characterization of beta-lactamases in Mycobacterium fortuitum including a role in beta-lactam resistance and evidence of partial inducibility.

29. Induction of aryl hydrocarbon hydroxylase by lymphocytes from women taking oral contraceptives.

30. Isoelectric focusing of beta-lactamases in Mycobacterium fortuitum. Association of a single enzyme pattern with cefoxitin resistance.

31. The effect of metal ions on the atypical mycobacteria: growth and colony coloration.

32. Isoelectric focusing of beta-lactamases from sputum and middle ear isolates of Branhamella catarrhalis recovered in the United States.

33. BRO beta-lactamases of Branhamella catarrhalis and Moraxella subgenus Moraxella, including evidence for chromosomal beta-lactamase transfer by conjugation in B. catarrhalis, M. nonliquefaciens, and M. lacunata.

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