Antimicrobial Producing Bacteria as Agents of
... would tell us the likelihood of having antimicrobial producers within it, after a sufficient number of soils had been characterized to establish a baseline. Once enough soils had been tested, both for their CLPP and for antimicrobial-producers, we might be able to determine that a certain CLPP had a ...
... would tell us the likelihood of having antimicrobial producers within it, after a sufficient number of soils had been characterized to establish a baseline. Once enough soils had been tested, both for their CLPP and for antimicrobial-producers, we might be able to determine that a certain CLPP had a ...
The Antimicrobial Effect of Lactobacillus Casei Culture Supernatant
... reports have documented the role of Lactobacillus in prevention and treatment of some infections. Lactobacillus strains have commensally in the human body (12). Its beneficial effect may be associated to its ability to inhibit the growth of pathogens, apparently by the secretion of antibacterial sub ...
... reports have documented the role of Lactobacillus in prevention and treatment of some infections. Lactobacillus strains have commensally in the human body (12). Its beneficial effect may be associated to its ability to inhibit the growth of pathogens, apparently by the secretion of antibacterial sub ...
Ruminant Digestive Anatomy and Function
... passed into the reticulum. Then the solid portion slowly moves into the rumen for fermentation while most of the liquid portion rapidly moves from the reticulorumen into the omasum and then abomasum. The solid portion left behind in the rumen typically remains for up to 48 hours and forms a dense ma ...
... passed into the reticulum. Then the solid portion slowly moves into the rumen for fermentation while most of the liquid portion rapidly moves from the reticulorumen into the omasum and then abomasum. The solid portion left behind in the rumen typically remains for up to 48 hours and forms a dense ma ...
Alterations in the Gastrointestinal System
... ions and molecules that can be absorbed into the body. In the large intestine, unabsorbed nutrients and wastes are collected for later elimination. Although the gastrointestinal tract is located inside the body, it is a long, hollow tube, the lumen (i.e., hollow center) of which is an extension of t ...
... ions and molecules that can be absorbed into the body. In the large intestine, unabsorbed nutrients and wastes are collected for later elimination. Although the gastrointestinal tract is located inside the body, it is a long, hollow tube, the lumen (i.e., hollow center) of which is an extension of t ...
The degradation of guar gum by a faecal incubation system
... the pH had fallen significantly by an average of 1.7 pH units and a high concentration of H, gas had been produced. These changes were almost certainly caused by bacterial action, since they did not occur during incubation of guar gum with autoclaved faeces. The smaller reduction in pH and release o ...
... the pH had fallen significantly by an average of 1.7 pH units and a high concentration of H, gas had been produced. These changes were almost certainly caused by bacterial action, since they did not occur during incubation of guar gum with autoclaved faeces. The smaller reduction in pH and release o ...
Research Report 2012 | 2013
... Pakt für Forschung und Innovation, the DFG and BMBF, and supported by various collaborations with industrial partners. For the discovery of new potential therapeutics we investigate primarily neglected microorganisms (endophytes, symbionts, little explored microorganisms) and apply genome-mining str ...
... Pakt für Forschung und Innovation, the DFG and BMBF, and supported by various collaborations with industrial partners. For the discovery of new potential therapeutics we investigate primarily neglected microorganisms (endophytes, symbionts, little explored microorganisms) and apply genome-mining str ...
PZG1 - Alamo Colleges
... supplement is provided because your lab book does not provide adequate explanation and background for most exercises. However, enough material is provided between the book and prelab, that none of you should experience the confusion level which was expressed prior to this supplement. The same proced ...
... supplement is provided because your lab book does not provide adequate explanation and background for most exercises. However, enough material is provided between the book and prelab, that none of you should experience the confusion level which was expressed prior to this supplement. The same proced ...
Chapter 3
... • The vascular system consists of arteries, capillaries and veins. The hepatic portal vein directs blood from the GI tract to the liver. The hepatic vein takes blood from the liver to the heart. The liver protects against toxic ...
... • The vascular system consists of arteries, capillaries and veins. The hepatic portal vein directs blood from the GI tract to the liver. The hepatic vein takes blood from the liver to the heart. The liver protects against toxic ...
Cochlear-Meningitis Vaccination
... • Worldwide, there are over 90 known reports of people getting meningitis after getting a cochlear implant. This is out of approximately 60,000 people who have cochlear implants. • Meningitis is an infection. The infection is in the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. There are two main ...
... • Worldwide, there are over 90 known reports of people getting meningitis after getting a cochlear implant. This is out of approximately 60,000 people who have cochlear implants. • Meningitis is an infection. The infection is in the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord. There are two main ...
This article appeared in a journal published by Elsevier. The... copy is furnished to the author for internal non-commercial research
... because they usually exist in much larger numbers and thus are easier to detect than enteric pathogens. Indicator bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, are used as a signal of fecal contamination based on the assumption that the only significant sources of E. coli in the environment are feces of human/ ...
... because they usually exist in much larger numbers and thus are easier to detect than enteric pathogens. Indicator bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, are used as a signal of fecal contamination based on the assumption that the only significant sources of E. coli in the environment are feces of human/ ...
Zentrum für Infektionsforschung Research Center for Infectious
... activation and therapeutic intervention might have a beneficial effect on the disease process. The aim is therefore to characterize accessible target cells of human polyomavirus infections and their viral activation state in healthy and immunosuppressed individuals. Lately we were able to characteri ...
... activation and therapeutic intervention might have a beneficial effect on the disease process. The aim is therefore to characterize accessible target cells of human polyomavirus infections and their viral activation state in healthy and immunosuppressed individuals. Lately we were able to characteri ...
Slide 1
... E. Coli appearing as a rose colored colony with a darker center or Strep Agalactiae appearing teal to ...
... E. Coli appearing as a rose colored colony with a darker center or Strep Agalactiae appearing teal to ...
- Academy Test Bank
... ASM Objective: 02.01 Bacteria have unique cell structures that can be targets for antibiotics, immunity and phage infection. ASM Topic: Module 02 Structure and Function Blooms Level: 1. Remember Learning Outcome: 03.03.01 Describe the fluid mosaic model of membrane structure and identify the types o ...
... ASM Objective: 02.01 Bacteria have unique cell structures that can be targets for antibiotics, immunity and phage infection. ASM Topic: Module 02 Structure and Function Blooms Level: 1. Remember Learning Outcome: 03.03.01 Describe the fluid mosaic model of membrane structure and identify the types o ...
Literature Review - UoN Repository
... There is no clear cut definition of what an alkaliphile is (Horikoshi, 1999; RIkizo, 1997). This is largely due to the fact that microbes have pH ranges in which they thrive. In addition, growth is not only dependent on pH but also nutrient availability, water activity, temperatures etc. Therefore t ...
... There is no clear cut definition of what an alkaliphile is (Horikoshi, 1999; RIkizo, 1997). This is largely due to the fact that microbes have pH ranges in which they thrive. In addition, growth is not only dependent on pH but also nutrient availability, water activity, temperatures etc. Therefore t ...
Localization of H.pylori within the Vacuole of CandidaYeast by Di
... maintaining symbiotic relationship with its eukaryotic host. This mutual adaptation of intracellular bacteria and their eukaryotic hosts is so intimate that would often allow both partners to survive the entire lifespan and the intracellular bacterium is transmitted to the next generation as an inte ...
... maintaining symbiotic relationship with its eukaryotic host. This mutual adaptation of intracellular bacteria and their eukaryotic hosts is so intimate that would often allow both partners to survive the entire lifespan and the intracellular bacterium is transmitted to the next generation as an inte ...
IOSR Journal of Pharmacy and Biological Sciences (IOSR-JPBS)
... multicellular communities of microorganisms attached to a surface or interface. Bacteria seem to initiate biofilm formation in response to specific environmental cues, such as nutrient and oxygen availability. Biofilm are the source of persistent infections of many pathogenic microbes. They are resp ...
... multicellular communities of microorganisms attached to a surface or interface. Bacteria seem to initiate biofilm formation in response to specific environmental cues, such as nutrient and oxygen availability. Biofilm are the source of persistent infections of many pathogenic microbes. They are resp ...
PhD thesis - Fakultät für Biologie und Vorklinische Medizin
... Gutachter: Prof. Dr. Erhard Strohm Gutachter: Prof. Dr. Roy Gross Tag des Promotionskolloquiums: ………………………………………………….………….….. Doktorurkunde augehändigt am: …………………………………………….…………………… ...
... Gutachter: Prof. Dr. Erhard Strohm Gutachter: Prof. Dr. Roy Gross Tag des Promotionskolloquiums: ………………………………………………….………….….. Doktorurkunde augehändigt am: …………………………………………….…………………… ...
A review and proposals for their investigation
... disease with S. mutans as the sole pathogen. More recently, other mutans streptococci such as S. sobrinus were classified as similar pathogens by some researchers, although these latter bacteria were less frequently identified in caries lesions, and when present, were in much smaller numbers than S. ...
... disease with S. mutans as the sole pathogen. More recently, other mutans streptococci such as S. sobrinus were classified as similar pathogens by some researchers, although these latter bacteria were less frequently identified in caries lesions, and when present, were in much smaller numbers than S. ...
National Strategy against Antibiotic Resistance
... infections will be reduced by 20 percent, measured in DDD/1000 inhabitants/day, compared to 2012. 5. Studies will be carried out on the burden of disease as a consequence of antibiotic resistance, as a consequence of possibly too little antibiotic use, and the effect of infection control measures. ...
... infections will be reduced by 20 percent, measured in DDD/1000 inhabitants/day, compared to 2012. 5. Studies will be carried out on the burden of disease as a consequence of antibiotic resistance, as a consequence of possibly too little antibiotic use, and the effect of infection control measures. ...
enteritis
... since it is an aerobic environment • Changes can lead to an anaerobic environment in the small intestine • Migration from the cecae and proliferation of CP in the small inestine is associated with protoxin elaboration • Trypsin will release the toxin from the pro-toxin and initiate necrotic enteriti ...
... since it is an aerobic environment • Changes can lead to an anaerobic environment in the small intestine • Migration from the cecae and proliferation of CP in the small inestine is associated with protoxin elaboration • Trypsin will release the toxin from the pro-toxin and initiate necrotic enteriti ...
Antibacterial activity of caffeine against plant pathogenic bacteria
... plant-pathogenic bacteria included in this study were sensitive to caffeine, with MIC and MBC values ranging from 5 to 20 mM and from 43 to 100 mM, respectively. These results are consistent with data Figure 2. Generation time of bacteria as affected by caffeine concentration in the media. concernin ...
... plant-pathogenic bacteria included in this study were sensitive to caffeine, with MIC and MBC values ranging from 5 to 20 mM and from 43 to 100 mM, respectively. These results are consistent with data Figure 2. Generation time of bacteria as affected by caffeine concentration in the media. concernin ...
Branhamella catarrhalis
... involved in both adherence and motility. Some of the other organisms that synthesize type 4 pili also synthesize a variety of hydrolytic enzymes that may be involved in pathogenesis, but these have yet to be identified in Moraxella. In the clinical laboratory , isolates of B . Catarrhalis must be di ...
... involved in both adherence and motility. Some of the other organisms that synthesize type 4 pili also synthesize a variety of hydrolytic enzymes that may be involved in pathogenesis, but these have yet to be identified in Moraxella. In the clinical laboratory , isolates of B . Catarrhalis must be di ...
HAEMORRHAGIC BOWEL SYNDROME IN GROWER PIGS by Annemarie Labuscagne
... known that there are many causes of HBS, making treatment and prevention of the disease syndrome very difficult. Although most veterinarians are of the belief that the main causative agent for HBS is L. intracellularis, the clinical presentation on farm does not correlate with that of acute PHE. PHE ...
... known that there are many causes of HBS, making treatment and prevention of the disease syndrome very difficult. Although most veterinarians are of the belief that the main causative agent for HBS is L. intracellularis, the clinical presentation on farm does not correlate with that of acute PHE. PHE ...
Inflammation and Disintegration of Intestinal Villi in an Experimental
... suggest that V. parahaemolyticus causes disease via different mechanisms than the related pathogen V. cholerae, which does not disrupt the intestinal epithelium nor induce significant inflammation in infected individuals (reviewed in [6]). Comparison of clinical and environmental isolates of V. para ...
... suggest that V. parahaemolyticus causes disease via different mechanisms than the related pathogen V. cholerae, which does not disrupt the intestinal epithelium nor induce significant inflammation in infected individuals (reviewed in [6]). Comparison of clinical and environmental isolates of V. para ...
Human microbiota
The human microbiota is the aggregate of microorganisms, a microbiome that resides on the surface and in deep layers of skin (including in mammary glands), in the saliva and oral mucosa, in the conjunctiva, and in the gastrointestinal tracts. They include bacteria, fungi, and archaea. Micro-animals which live on the human body are excluded. The human microbiome refer to their genomes.One study indicated they outnumber human cells 10 to 1. Some of these organisms perform tasks that are useful for the human host. However, the majority have been too poorly researched for us to understand the role they play, however communities of microflora have been shown to change their behavior in diseased individuals. Those that are expected to be present, and that under normal circumstances do not cause disease, but instead participate in maintaining health, are deemed members of the normal flora. Though widely known as microflora, this is a misnomer in technical terms, since the word root flora pertains to plants, and biota refers to the total collection of organisms in a particular ecosystem. Recently, the more appropriate term microbiota is applied, though its use has not eclipsed the entrenched use and recognition of flora with regard to bacteria and other microorganisms. Both terms are being used in different literature.Studies in 2009 questioned whether the decline in biota (including microfauna) as a result of human intervention might impede human health.Most of the microbes associated with humans appear to be not harmful at all, but rather assist in maintaining processes necessary for a healthy body. A surprising finding was that at specific sites on the body, a different set of microbes may perform the same function for different people. For example, on the tongues of two people, two entirely different sets of organisms will break down sugars in the same way. This suggests that medical science may be forced to abandon the ""one only"" microbe model of infectious disease, and rather pay attention to functions of groups of microbes that have somehow gone awry.