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Volume 11, Number 7, July 2005

Salmonella Agona Outbreak from Contaminated Aniseed, Germany

Judith Koch,* Annette Schrauder,* Katharina Alpers,* Dirk Werber,* Christina Frank,* Rita Prager,† Wolfgang Rabsch,† Susanne Broll,* Fabian Feil,‡ Peter Roggentin,§ Jochen Bockemühl,§ Helmut Tschäpe,† Andrea Ammon,* and Klaus Stark*
*Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany; †Robert Koch Institute, Wernigerode, Germany; ‡Public Health Department, State of Lower Saxony, Hannover, Germany; and §Institute for Hygiene and the Environment, Hamburg, Germany

 
 
Figure 2.
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Figure 2. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis patterns of XbaI-digested DNA from Salmonella Agona strains. Lanes 1 and 2, pattern SAX0001 (outbreak strain from tea); lanes 3–5, pattern SAX0001 (outbreak strain from humans); lanes 6–8 (nonoutbreak strains); lane S, molecular mass standard (S. Braenderup). kb, kilobases.

 

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This page last reviewed June 15, 2005

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National Center for Infectious Diseases
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