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Isolation and Characterization of Halophilic Bacteria
Isolation and Characterization of Halophilic Bacteria

Lactic Acid Bacteria
Lactic Acid Bacteria

... Homofermentative LAB convert sugars almost quantitatively to lactic acid. The second group, the heterofermentative bacteria produce not only lactic acid but ethanol/acetic acid, and carbon-dioxide. In practice, a test for gas production from glucose will distinguish between the two groups. Differenc ...
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Geomicrobiological Cycling of Iron
Geomicrobiological Cycling of Iron

... This physiological group of microorganisms usesO2 as electron acceptor tor enzymatic oxidation of Fe(II) at neutral pH. To gain energy for growth they have to compete with the chemical oxidation of Fe(II) by O2. lnitially, research on oxygen-dependent,neutrophilic Fe(II) oxidizers focused on species ...
The objectives of this chapter are to
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Bacterial translocation: Overview of mechanisms and clinical impact
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... Count of weakly magnetized regions ...
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... Immotile: Not moving or lacking the ability to move. Agar: A dried hydrophilic, colloidal substance extracted from various species of red algae; used in solid culture media for bacteria and other microorganisms. ...
ALTERAÇÕES ULTRAESTRUTURAIS EM BACTÉRIAS EXPOSTAS
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... come from the Greek meaning ‘dwarf’ and was first applied in science in 1959 by Richard Feynman, a Nobel Prize winning physicist3,4. Nanotechnology can be defined as the science that involve the design, synthesis, characterization, and application of nanomaterials (all materials of size ranging betw ...
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... transferred into a complete medium accumulate more polyP than the cells growing in the complete medium, i.e., there is a phenomenon of hypercompensation, or “phosphate overplus” [29], which is also known for bacteria [4]. Some yeast species accumulating considerable amounts of polyP were isolated fr ...
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... without losing their power of attraction. Those materials and your hand are "transparent'' to the magnetic field's lines of force. When an object is transparent, you can see through that object. Well, for a magnet, this means that its power of attraction can go through your hand and attract an iron ...
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... the future will be based primarily upon the sequences, structure, and relationships of molecules, the classical gross properties of cells and organisms being used largely to confirm and embellish these. It is only on the molecular level that we see the living world divide into three distinct primary ...
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... Imagine that you are working in a microbiology lab and you are given a sample of bacteria on an agar plate. You are told that it is either Staphylococcus aureus or Streptococcus pyogenes. How would you determine which one the sample contains? Are there any tests you could do to differentiate them? W ...
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...  Mixtures were thus obtained in which different substituents on the β-Lactam moiety were obtained.  Culture media enriched with phenylacetic acid resulted in it being preferentially incorporated into molecule to form benzylpenicillin or Penicillin G.  When phenoxyacetic acid was used instead of p ...
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Magnetotactic bacteria

Magnetotactic bacteria (or MTB) are a polyphyletic group of bacteria discovered by Richard P. Blakemore in 1975, that orient along the magnetic field lines of Earth's magnetic field. To perform this task, these bacteria have organelles called magnetosomes that contain magnetic crystals. The biological phenomenon of microorganisms tending to move in response to the environment's magnetic characteristics is known as magnetotaxis (although this term is misleading in that every other application of the term taxis involves a stimulus-response mechanism). In contrast to the magnetoception of animals, the bacteria contain fixed magnets that force the bacteria into alignment — even dead cells align, just like a compass needle. The alignment is believed to aid these organisms in reaching regions of optimal oxygen concentration.
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