A bacterial strain is a genetic variant or subtype within a bacterial species that exhibits minor but identifiable differences from other members of the same species. Strains are typically derived from a single bacterial cell or colony and represent a pure culture with distinct genetic or phenotypic traits. These differences can include variations in size, shape, motility, metabolic capabilities, antigenic properties, or genetic sequences.
Importance and Applications
- Medical Microbiology: Differentiating strains helps identify pathogenic variants with different virulence or antibiotic resistance profiles. For example, pathogenic Escherichia coli strains (EPEC, EHEC, EAEC) cause different diseases.
- Epidemiology: Strain typing tracks outbreaks and transmission pathways of infectious diseases.
- Biotechnology: Engineered strains are optimized for production of proteins, enzymes, biofuels, and other metabolites.
- Taxonomy and Phylogeny: Type strains anchor species definitions and help clarify bacterial relationships.
A bacterial strain represents a genetically and/or phenotypically distinct subset within a bacterial species, often derived from a single ancestor cell. While strains share most characteristics with their species, they differ in minor but meaningful ways that can affect their behavior, pathogenicity, or utility. Advances in genomic sequencing have refined strain identification, enabling precise differentiation critical for research, clinical diagnostics, and industrial applications.

