「Bacterium」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 198件
that harbors a parasite (that is, a virus, a | bacterium, a protozoan, or a fungus), or a mutual or c |
ia mallei is a gram-negative bipolar aerobic | bacterium, a Burkholderia-genus human and animal patho |
The | bacterium accounts for an estimated 20% of the oxygen |
atermelon and other cucurbit crops caused by | bacterium Acidovorax avenae subsp. |
ronment more conducive to the C. perfringens | bacterium, allowing the flavors from the bacterial met |
The | bacterium also has some commercial significance - the |
Listeria monocytogenes is a gram positive | bacterium and causes many food-borne infections such a |
Bacillus megaterium is a rod shaped | bacterium and one of the largest eubacteria found in s |
ragments can then bind to the surface of the | bacterium, and initiate the formation of a C3 converta |
Dermatophilus congolensis is a gram positive | bacterium and is the etiologic agent of a disease call |
80 percent of individuals infected with the | bacterium are asymptomatic. |
of periodontal disease and antibodies to the | bacterium are significantly more common in patients wi |
Some strains of this | bacterium are pathogenic to humans as it is strongly a |
8 - Scientists identify a previously unknown | bacterium as the cause of the "Legionnaires' disease." |
These antigens are produced by the | bacterium at normal human body temperature. |
arstar is a small protein synthesized by the | bacterium Bacillus amyloliquefaciens. |
mponent of the lethal factor produced by the | bacterium Bacillus anthracis. |
Cytochrome P450 BM3 (CYP102A1) from the soil | bacterium Bacillus megaterium catalyzes the NADPH-depe |
They are produced by the Gram-positive | bacterium Bacillus polymyxa and are selectively toxic |
witch function has been characterised in the | bacterium Bacillus subtilis, where the riboswitch is l |
It is derived from the | bacterium Bacillus polymyxa. |
La Duc named the | bacterium Bacillus odysseyi sp. |
ced in fermented coconut contaminated by the | bacterium Burkholderia gladioli pathovar cocovenenans. |
ltrose has been isolated from strains of the | bacterium Butyrivibrio fibrisolvens. |
ation of the cellulose is carried out in the | bacterium by a large extracellular cellulase system ca |
An understanding of the transmission of this | bacterium by insect vectors is economically important |
He was the first doctor to isolate a | bacterium called Actinomyces from a human being in 190 |
as CS-514, it was originally identified in a | bacterium called Nocardia autotrophica by researchers |
they nevertheless referred to as an atypical | bacterium called Bacterium pneumosintes), other resear |
The test itself tells whether the | bacterium can ferment lactose, reduce litmus, form clo |
A | bacterium can have as many as 1,000 fimbriae. |
This | bacterium can, however, live naturally in any environm |
e inner, concave side of the crescent-shaped | bacterium Caulobacter crescentus. |
ngens alpha toxin is a toxin produced by the | bacterium Clostridium perfringens (C. |
by tetanospasmin, a protein derived from the | bacterium Clostridium tetani, which causes tetanus. |
He used the | bacterium Clostridium acetobutylicum (the Weizmann org |
cessfully isolated this acid from fermenting | bacterium Clostridium tetanomorphum in 1950s. |
roduct of the fermentation of biomass by the | bacterium Clostridium acetobutylicum (also known as th |
is bread in which the main rising agent is a | bacterium Clostridium perfringens, which leavens the b |
Bacillus licheniformis is a | bacterium commonly found in the soil. |
B. anthracis was the first | bacterium conclusively demonstrated to cause disease, |
racis is the source of of anthrax, the first | bacterium conclusively shown to cause disease. |
The | bacterium degrades urea, creating ammonia which increa |
At this depth, the | bacterium, designated GSB1, lives off the dim glow of |
Methanococcoides burtoni and a Gram-positive | bacterium, Desulfitobacterium hafniense. |
g and other research showed in 1989 that the | bacterium did not belong in the genus Campylobacter, i |
lated to the fact that photosynthesis in the | bacterium does not take place in the thylakoid membran |
wn the 2-membrane vacuoles that surround the | bacterium during transfer. |
Chlamydophila felis is a | bacterium endemic among house cats worldwide, primaril |
Bipolaris maydis (Nisikado & Miyake) by the | bacterium Erwinia amylovora (Burrill) Winslow et al., |
crtl from the soil | bacterium Erwinia uredovora |
Heme o, found in the | bacterium Escherichia coli, functions in a similar man |
by expressing a part of the fly gene in the | bacterium Escherichia coli. |
found to exist within certain strains of the | bacterium Escherichia coli. |
ically, E. coli (not to be confused with the | bacterium Escherichia coli) is important in medicine b |
icles or contaminants (spores, molds, fungi, | bacterium, etc.). |
tive, microaerophilic genus of magnetotactic | bacterium, first isolated from pond water by the micro |
Faecalibacterium prausnitzii is a commensal | bacterium found in the human gut. |
Marinobacterium stanieri is a Gram-negative | bacterium found in sea water. |
Chromatium okenii is a Gram-negative | bacterium found in water. |
e root nodules that host the nitrogen-fixing | bacterium Frankia. |
a novel lithoheterotrophic sulfur-oxidizing | bacterium from the Black Sea". |
nonphotosynthetic and slightly thermophilic | bacterium from a marine hot spring that is very closel |
nov., a budding | bacterium from hypersaline and heliothermal Ekho Lake" |
Chrysiogenes arsenatis is a species of | bacterium given its own phylum, called the Chrysiogene |
The | bacterium had been originally isolated forty five year |
It was later discovered that this | bacterium had one of the smallest known genomes, a fac |
egative, facultatively anaerobic, rod-shaped | bacterium Hafnia alvei. |
indicates that a pathogen like a virus or a | bacterium has a narrow host range and can infect only |
Bacillus safensis is a | bacterium, highly resistant to gamma and UV radiation, |
Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a | bacterium in immunocompromised individuals that infect |
her Willy Burgdorfer, who first isolated the | bacterium in 1982. |
He requested a patent for the | bacterium in the United States but was turned down by |
Achromobacter ruhlandii is a Gram-negative | bacterium included in the order Burkholderiales. |
After the | bacterium invades the bowel system, it spreads through |
The | bacterium is known to cause 'watermark disease' in wil |
While opportunistic infections do occur, the | bacterium is generally considered non-pathogenic. |
The | bacterium is Gram-positive, non-spore-forming and non- |
The | bacterium is named after the NASA Jet Propulsion Labor |
The | bacterium is sensitive to the majority of antibiotics, |
If a mutant | bacterium is relA- it is said to be relaxed and no reg |
The | bacterium is well adapted to grow in alkaline conditio |
ia pseudomallei and other genus members, the | bacterium is nonmotile; its shape is something in betw |
Bacterium is arranged into the streptobacillus form. | |
It is the only | bacterium known to synthesize a protein capsule (D-glu |
Nisin is produced by fermentation using the | bacterium Lactococcus lactis. |
When the sxy gene is deleted the | bacterium loses the ability to express genes in the co |
A | bacterium may undergo conjugation. |
ass of enediyne antibiotics derived from the | bacterium Micromonospora echinospora, with calicheamic |
microbiological laboratories to identify the | bacterium Moraxella catarrhalis. |
ealth Department found levels of the E. coli | bacterium more than twice the state limit in some part |
For her thesis she worked on the | bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis which causes most |
It is caused by the | bacterium Mycoplasma mycoides mycoides, and the sympto |
works towards creating a partially synthetic | bacterium, Mycoplasma laboratorium. |
is a short stretch of DNA in the genome of a | bacterium near which homologous recombination is unusu |
ly meaning "a unit", but in effect meaning a | bacterium; New Latin feminine gender noun Azomonas, ni |
pylobacter jejuni, a spiral and comma shaped | bacterium normally found in cattle, swine, and birds, |
ycobacterium confluentis is a non-pathogenic | bacterium of the oral cavity. |
terium columnare is a thin Gram-negative rod | bacterium of the genus Flavobacterium. |
mchii is a bacteriocin-producing lactic acid | bacterium of the genus Lactobacillus. |
Bacillus fusiformis is a gram-positive | bacterium of the genus Bacillus. |
fernus is a thermophilic, strictly anaerobic | bacterium of the genus Bacillus that lives in deep ter |
s known as Bacillus anthracis, the causative | bacterium of anthrax. |
particularly important during infection by a | bacterium or virus, or if the cell was cancerous. |
An exoelectrogen normally refers to a | bacterium or prokaryote that has the ability to transf |
represent sites of viral multiplication in a | bacterium or a eukaryotic cell and usually consist of |
etermine whether or not a specific strain of | bacterium or fungus is susceptible to the action of a |
Pseudomonas rathonis is a Gram-negative | bacterium originally isolated from the rhizosphere of |
Cloacibacterium normanense is a | bacterium originally found in wastewater in Norman, Ok |
he temperature of the water which favors one | bacterium over another. |
detect previously unknown RNAs in the marine | bacterium Pelagibacter ubique. |
The | bacterium Pelobacter acidigallici is able to degrade t |
Fibrobacter succinogenes is a cellulolytic | bacterium present in the rumen of cattle. |
A gene of the | bacterium Proteus mirabilis that causes urinary tract |
The marine | bacterium Pseudoalteromonas carrageenovora (also known |
und in specific strains of the Gram-negative | bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens. |
Tolaasin is a toxin produced by the soil | bacterium Pseudomonas tolaasii. |
biotic pigment produced by the Gram negative | bacterium Pseudomonas aeruginosa. |
A strain of the | bacterium Pseudomonas mendocina metabolyzes benzoic ac |
The | bacterium Pseudomonas diminuta will hydrolyze this com |
n antibiotic obtained by fermentation of the | bacterium Pseudomonas fluorescens. |
The soil | bacterium Pseudomonas maltophilia (strain DI-6) conver |
sphaericus are both naturally occurring soil | bacterium registered as larvicides under the names Aqu |
et of genes in Vibrio fischeri, a rod-shaped | bacterium residing in organisms that live in marine en |
luding Streptococcus mutans, the common oral | bacterium responsible for dental plaque. |
the symbiotic interaction between plant and | bacterium: roots uninfected with Rhizobium do not synt |
The | bacterium seems to prefer high water temperatures (abo |
The cellulase system of the | bacterium significantly differs from fungal cellulases |
drug is designed to bind to a toxin of this | bacterium, so that it can be more easily broken down a |
in B (SEB) is an enterotoxin produced by the | bacterium Staphylococcus aureus. |
gar-well diffusion assay is conducted on the | bacterium Staphylococcus aureus to test the methylglyo |
a), is the major cytotoxic agent released by | bacterium Staphylococcus aureus and the first identifi |
It is claimed that the common | bacterium Streptococcus mitis was found to have accide |
sis in eukaryotic organisms, produced by the | bacterium Streptomyces griseus. |
aturally in shellfish and is produced by the | bacterium Streptomyces spiroverticillatus. |
fungus, although it is produced by a type of | bacterium, Streptomyces tsukubaensis. |
ative of staurosporine, an alkaloid from the | bacterium Streptomyces staurosporeus, and is active in |
Brenneria salicis is a Gram-negative | bacterium that is pathogenic on plants. |
by Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the pathogen | bacterium that causes diphtheria. |
Corynebacterium granulosum is a | bacterium that may stimulate the immune system to figh |
erium flaccumfaciens is a Gram-positive soil | bacterium that causes disease on a variety of plants. |
er (Tim Curry) - A lizard-like scarlet fever | bacterium that makes Hector get a fever. |
nebacterium bovis is a pathogenic veterinary | bacterium that causes mastitis and pyelonephritis in c |
seudomonas straminea is a Gram-negative, rod | bacterium that includes strains formerly identified as |
Uropathogenic E. coli is a | bacterium that causes urinary tract infections. |
gwangyangensis (strain GW14-5T) is a marine | bacterium that can degrade a number of polycyclic hydr |
positive lactic acid bacteria, including the | bacterium that causes gaffkaemia in lobsters. |
LOHI) is an anaerobic, motile, gram-positive | bacterium that thrives in feces and soil. |
o an attenuated strain of Yersinia pestis, a | bacterium that causes the plague.. |
n 1905 Schaudinn and Hoffmann discovered the | bacterium that was responsible for syphilis, a spiral- |
terisation of Burkholderia pseudomallei (the | bacterium that causes melioidosis). |
tive, and highly pleomorphic Rickettsia-like | bacterium that belongs to its own, new genus in the al |
rium in an obligate mutualistic endosymbiont | bacterium that is believed to inhabit all species of c |
Treponema denticola is a species of | bacterium that can become an opportunistic pathogen in |
loped a solution to the duroplast problem: a | bacterium that will eat a Trabant in 20 days and leave |
For example, E. coli is a rod-shaped | bacterium that could, therefore, be described as "a ba |
s first studied in Vibrio fischeri, a marine | bacterium that uses a synthase (LuxI) to produce a spe |
Studies of this extreme thermophilic | bacterium that could be grown in cell culture was init |
iella oxytoca is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped | bacterium that is closely related to K. pneumoniae, fr |
Vibrio cholerae: The | bacterium that causes cholera (SEM image) |
et (for example, mannose on the surface of a | bacterium), the MASP protein functions to cleave the b |
Upon encountering a host | bacterium, the tail section of the virion binds to rec |
qI is a restriction enzyme isolated from the | bacterium Thermus aquaticus in 1978. |
The thermophilic | bacterium Thermus aquaticus, important because it prod |
The | bacterium Thiomargarita namibiensis is discovered off |
The | bacterium thrives in media with salt (NaCl) concentrat |
, genetic material is transferred to another | bacterium through the mating bridge. |
that bacteriophage can carry genes from one | bacterium to another. |
Some still believe the source of the | bacterium to be the Bellevue-Stratford's air condition |
It derives its name from the fact that the | bacterium transfers this DNA fragment into the host pl |
ding of t-RNA which consequently, leaves the | bacterium unable to synthesize proteins vital to its g |
pioneered earlier but never used for a whole | bacterium until TIGR's project. |
Bacillus pumilis is a | bacterium used as a soil inoculant in agriculture and |
Bacillus sphaericus is an obligate aerobe | bacterium used as a larvicide for mosquito control. |
The | bacterium used to ferment Limburger cheese and other r |
ecific to Lactococcus lactis, an acid lactic | bacterium used in the first stage of making cheese. |
ese produces its notorious smell because the | bacterium used to ferment Limburger cheese and many ot |
Bacillus lentimorbus is a | bacterium used as a soil inoculant in agriculture and |
Acaryochloris marina, a | bacterium, uses it for photosynthesis. |
The | bacterium usually enters fish through gills, mouth, or |
the name given to a particular strain of the | bacterium Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of chol |
They have been found to house the | bacterium Vibrio cholerae, which causes cholera, by al |
Diagram of the | bacterium, Vibrio cholerae |
various ligands such as antibodies, lectins, | bacterium, viruses, and toxins, and |
The | bacterium was isolated in 1935 by T. Hof from fermente |
The | bacterium was initially named Campylobacter pyloridis, |
This | bacterium was originally injected into guinea pigs, an |
neutrophilic chemolithotrophic gram-negative | bacterium which can grow by oxidising ferrous to ferri |
rkholderia caryophylli is a plant pathogenic | bacterium, which can cause wilt, foot and root rot on |
fuchsin and is used for the staining of the | bacterium which causes tuberculosis. |
acas, Venezuela discovered the M. cosmeticum | bacterium, which can thrive in salons, healthcare and |
nd strictly) thermophilic hydrogen-oxidizing | bacterium whose optimal growth temperature is around 7 |
Wigglesworth also described the | bacterium Wigglesworthia glossinidia brevipalpis, an e |
typically, B. kururiensis is a Gram negative | bacterium with an oval cell morphology. |
For the | bacterium with the species abbreviation E. coli, see E |
nov., a novel marine | bacterium within the Roseobacter clade in the order Rh |
basis with the engulfment of photosynthetic | bacterium within the eukaryotic cell. |
share an endosymbiotic relationship with the | bacterium Wolbachia. |
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