نتایج جستجو برای: saprophyte

تعداد نتایج: 355  

Journal: :Revista latinoamericana de microbiologia 2006
Marco Adán Juárez-Verdayes Miguel Angel Reyes-López Mario Eugenio Cancino-Díaz Susana Muñoz-Salas Sandra Rodríguez-Martínez Francisco Javier Zavala-Díaz de la Serna César Hugo Hernández-Rodríguez Juan Carlos Cancino-Díaz

The infection frequency associated to bacterial conjunctivitis, corneal ulcers (CU), and endophthalmitis was studied along a five years period. The isolation and identification of microorganisms were performed by culture-based methods and biochemical test respectively. Also, a nested PCR to detect gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria in the clinical samples was assayed. Nested PCR was a mor...

Journal: :Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI 2012
Mikko T Lehtonen Motomu Akita Wolfgang Frank Ralf Reski Jari P T Valkonen

Production of apoplastic reactive oxygen species (ROS), or oxidative burst, is among the first responses of plants upon recognition of microorganisms. It requires peroxidase or NADPH oxidase (NOX) activity and factors maintaining cellular redox homeostasis. Here, PpTSPO1 involved in mitochondrial tetrapyrrole transport and abiotic (salt) stress tolerance was tested for its role in biotic stress...

2015
Li You David Rabern Simmons Craig C. Bateman Dylan P. G. Short Matthew T. Kasson Robert J. Rabaglia Jiri Hulcr Petr Karlovsky

Ambrosia symbiosis is an obligate, farming-like mutualism between wood-boring beetles and fungi. It evolved at least 11 times and includes many notorious invasive pests. All ambrosia beetles studied to date cultivate ascomycotan fungi: early colonizers of recently killed trees with poor wood digestion. Beetles in the widespread genus Ambrosiodmus, however, colonize decayed wood. We characterize...

2014
Suat Moi Puah S. D. Puthucheary Jin Town Wang Yi Jiun Pan Kek Heng Chua

The Gram-negative saprophyte Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis, an infectious disease which is endemic in Southeast Asia and northern Australia. This bacterium possesses many virulence factors which are thought to contribute to its survival and pathogenicity. Using a virulent clinical isolate of B. pseudomallei and an attenuated strain of the same B. pseudomallei i...

Journal: :Applied and environmental microbiology 2016
Philip E Stewart James A Carroll L Rennee Olano Daniel E Sturdevant Patricia A Rosa

The saprophyte Leptospira biflexa is an excellent model for studying the physiology of the medically important Leptospira genus, the pathogenic members of which are more recalcitrant to genetic manipulation and have significantly slower in vitro growth. However, relatively little is known regarding the proteome of L. biflexa, limiting its utility as a model for some studies. Therefore, we have ...

Journal: :PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases 2009
Mirjam Kaestli Mark Mayo Glenda Harrington Linda Ward Felicity Watt Jason V. Hill Allen C. Cheng Bart J. Currie

BACKGROUND The soil-dwelling saprophyte bacterium Burkholderia pseudomallei is the cause of melioidosis, a severe disease of humans and animals in southeast Asia and northern Australia. Despite the detection of B. pseudomallei in various soil and water samples from endemic areas, the environmental habitat of B. pseudomallei remains unclear. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS We performed a large ...

2014
Konstantin Boroda Li Li

Elizabethkingia meningosepticum (EM) is a saprophyte which is ubiquitous in nature, but not normally present in the human flora. Instances of infection are rare in the USA, but EM may be an emerging pathogen among immune-compromised patients. EM can cause a variety of infections, but nosocomial pneumonia and bacteremia have been the most commonly reported among immune-compromised adults. EM has...

Journal: :Molecular microbiology 2017
Cassandra E Nelson Artur Rogowski Carl Morland Joshua A Wilhide Harry J Gilbert Jeffrey G Gardner

Degradation of polysaccharides forms an essential arc in the carbon cycle, provides a percentage of our daily caloric intake, and is a major driver in the renewable chemical industry. Microorganisms proficient at degrading insoluble polysaccharides possess large numbers of carbohydrate active enzymes (CAZymes), many of which have been categorized as functionally redundant. Here we present data ...

2011
Tomasz Kulik Agnieszka Pszczółkowska Maciej Łojko

Fusarium avenaceum is a common soil saprophyte and plant pathogen of a variety of hosts worldwide. This pathogen is often involved in the crown rot and head blight of cereals that affects grain yield and quality. F. avenaceum contaminates grain with enniatins more than any species, and they are often detected at the highest prevalence among fusarial toxins in certain geographic areas. We studie...

Journal: :Infection and immunity 1970
R C Johnson B P Livermore J K Walby H M Jenkin

The lipid composition of five parasitic and six saprophytic leptospires was compared. Lipids comprise 18 to 26% of the dry weight of the cells after chloroform-methanol extraction. No residual (bound) lipid was found after acid or alkaline hydrolysis of the extracted residue. The total lipid was composed of 60 to 70% phospholipid, and the remaining lipid was free fatty acids. The phospholipid f...

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