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Bacterial conjugation in a heterogeneous world
Bacteria frequently contain plasmids, circular pieces of non-chromosomal DNA that can make bacteria resistant to antibiotics or allow plasmids to be transferred to other bacteria in a process called conjugation.
Jesse B. Alderliesten
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Stabilizing bacterial conjugation via conjugation junction proteins
Biophysical Journal, 2022Leticia Beltran +4 more
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ACS Nano
The rising threat of antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) infections highlights the urgent need for effective antimicrobial agents and therapies. Peptide-based antimicrobial nanomaterials are well-placed to meet this need.
Yuanyuan He +14 more
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The rising threat of antimicrobial-resistant (AMR) infections highlights the urgent need for effective antimicrobial agents and therapies. Peptide-based antimicrobial nanomaterials are well-placed to meet this need.
Yuanyuan He +14 more
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Natural conjugative plasmids induce bacterial biofilm development
Nature, 2001Horizontal gene transfer is a principal source of evolution leading to change in the ecological character of bacterial species. Bacterial conjugation, which promotes the horizontal transfer of genetic material between donor and recipient cells by physical contact, is a phenomenon of fundamental evolutionary consequence.
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Bacterial Conjugation A Historical Perspective
1993The phenomenon of conjugation in bacteria provides one of the cornerstones of bacterial genetics. Use of the technology led to our initial understanding of the circular bacterial chromosome carrying Escherichia coli’s array of genes and of the recombination process whereby these genes could be reassorted.
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