نتایج جستجو برای: methanobrevibacter

تعداد نتایج: 273  

Journal: :Sustainability 2021

Fat rich microorganisms, such as microalgae Schizochytrium spp., are potential biotechnological tools in the modulation of rumen microbiome towards ecofriendly and high nutritional value end-products. However, limited vivo trials have been reported on topic. The aim this study was to contribute knowledge effect fat methanogenic feed degrading particle-associated microbes goats’ content. For tri...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2002
Andreas Fahlman Winston C Lin William B Whitman Susan R Kayar

In H(2) biochemical decompression, H(2)-metabolizing intestinal microbes remove gas stored in tissues of animals breathing hyperbaric H(2), thereby reducing decompression sickness (DCS) risk. We hypothesized that increasing intestinal perfusion in pigs would increase the activity of intestinal Methanobrevibacter smithii, lowering DCS incidence further. Pigs (Sus scrofa, 17-23 kg, n = 20) that i...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 2001
S R Kayar A Fahlman W C Lin W B Whitman

The risk of decompression sickness (DCS) was modulated by varying the biochemical activity used to eliminate some of the hydrogen (H(2)) stored in the tissues of pigs (19.4 +/- 0.2 kg) during hyperbaric exposures to H(2). Treated pigs (n = 16) received intestinal injections of Methanobrevibacter smithii, a microbe that metabolizes H(2) to water and CH(4). Surgical controls (n = 10) received int...

Journal: :Cancer research 2003
Lakshmi Krishnan Subash Sad Girishchandra B Patel G Dennis Sprott

Archaeosome adjuvants formulated as archaeal ether glycerolipid vesicles induce strong CD4(+) as well as CD8(+) CTL responses to entrapped soluble antigens. Immunization of mice with ovalbumin (OVA) entrapped in archaeosomes composed of the total polar lipids of Methanobrevibacter smithii resulted in a potent OVA-specific CD8(+) T-cell response, and subsequently, the mice dramatically resisted ...

2011
Beatrix Bialek Roland A. Diaz-Bone Dominik Pieper Markus Hollmann Reinhard Hensel

Methanoarchaea have an outstanding capability to methylate numerous metal(loid)s therefore producing toxic and highly mobile derivatives. Here, we report that the production of methylated bismuth species by the methanoarchaeum Methanobrevibacter smithii, a common member of the human intestine, impairs the growth of members of the beneficial intestinal microbiota at low concentrations. The bacte...

2013
Shannon McQuaig John Griffith Valerie J. Harwood

Water quality was assessed at two marine beaches in California (USA) by measuring culturable fecal indicator bacteria (FIB) concentrations, library-independent microbial source tracking (MST) methods targeting human-associated microbes (human polyomaviruses PCR and qPCR, Methanobrevibacter smithii PCR, Bacteroides HF183 PCR) and a human pathogen (adenovirus by nested PCR). FIB levels periodical...

2013
Mohammad Faseleh Jahromi Juan Boo Liang Yin Wan Ho Rosfarizan Mohamad Yong Meng Goh Parisa Shokryazdan James Chin

Lovastatin, a natural byproduct of some fungi, is able to inhibit HMG-CoA (3-hydroxy-3 methyl glutaryl CoA) reductase. This is a key enzyme involved in isoprenoid synthesis and essential for cell membrane formation in methanogenic Archaea. In this paper, experiments were designed to test the hypothesis that lovastatin secreted by Aspergillus terreus in fermented rice straw extracts (FRSE) can i...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2008
Buck S Samuel Abdullah Shaito Toshiyuki Motoike Federico E Rey Fredrik Backhed Jill K Manchester Robert E Hammer S Clay Williams Jan Crowley Masashi Yanagisawa Jeffrey I Gordon

The distal human intestine harbors trillions of microbes that allow us to extract calories from otherwise indigestible dietary polysaccharides. The products of polysaccharide fermentation include short-chain fatty acids that are ligands for Gpr41, a G protein-coupled receptor expressed by a subset of enteroendocrine cells in the gut epithelium. To examine the contribution of Gpr41 to energy bal...

2017
Tamsin Lyons Tommy Boland Sean Storey Evelyn Doyle

Diet has been shown to have a significant impact on microbial community composition in the rumen and could potentially be used to manipulate rumen microbiome structure to achieve specific outcomes. There is some evidence that a window may exist in early life, while the microbiome is being established, where manipulation through diet could lead to long-lasting results. The aim of this study was ...

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