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w ie v
w ie v

... cells, they lead to the release of cyanobacteria toxins into the surrounding water, thus exacerbating the problems (Lam et al., 1995). The chemical substances are also toxic to other aquatic microorganisms and may accumulate in sediments to harmful concentrations that may inevitably damage the lake ...
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... reflects an expressed phenotype rather than individual resistant clones, and that this phenotype can be overcome by nutritional stimulation and dilution. Interestingly, bacteria in high density (109–1011 CFU/mL as compared to 105 CFU/mL) remained tolerant to antibiotics despite transfer to fresh med ...
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... did the BLAST search looking for ‘short nearly exact matches’ to the amino-acid sequence of human IL-10. These two bacterial genes were classified as acetate kinases in the Genbank database. I followed this up by doing a ‘protein-protein BLAST’ on the bacterial sequences, thus looking for similarity ...
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Chapter 1 Notes - Social Circle City Schools

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Bacterial morphological plasticity

Bacterial morphological plasticity refers to evolutionary changes in the shape and size of bacterial cells. As bacteria evolve, morphology changes have to be made to maintain the consistency of the cell. However, this consistency could be affected in some circumstances (such as environmental stress) and changes in bacterial shape and size, but specially the transformation into filamentous organisms have been recently showed. These are survival strategies that affect the bacterial normal physiology in response for instance to innate immune response, predator sensing, quorum sensing and antimicrobial signs.
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