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The two sub-types that are responsible for yersinosis are Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersiniapseudotuberculosis.
The name Yersinia comes from Dr. Alexandre Yersin, who was the first person to grow a much more deadly type of Yersinia known as Yersinia pestis, the bacteria responsible for what is now known as bubonic plague.
Yersinia are classified as gram-negative bacteria (bacteria that do not accept the color of a stain in a Gram stain test, which indicates the general chemical nature of the cell wall of the bacteria); they have a variety of appearances, and are therefore called pleomorphic.
Yersin, Aleksandre J.E. (1863-1943) A Swiss bacteriologist working in Paris, who has given his name to the Yersinia-bacterias.
Yersinia A group of gram-negative anaerobic rod-shaped bacterias belonging to the Enterobacteriaceae-family.
To this bacteria genus belongs Yersinia pestis, the bacteria causing plague, and Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersiniapseudotuberculosis, bacterias causing acute bowel infections in humans.