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CRC Critical Reviews in Toxicology, 1977
L. Joe Berry, Stephan E. Mergenhagen
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L. Joe Berry, Stephan E. Mergenhagen
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PHARMACOLOGY OF BACTERIAL TOXINS
Pharmacological Reviews, 1964H, RASKOVA, J, VANECEK
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Annals of clinical and laboratory science, 1988
Many bacterial toxins are proteins, encoded by the bacterial chromosomal genes, plasmids or phages. Lysogenic phages form part of the chromosome. The toxins are usually liberated from the organism by lysis, but some are shed with outer membrane proteins in outer membrane vesicles. An important non-protein toxin is lipopolysaccharide or endotoxin, which
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Many bacterial toxins are proteins, encoded by the bacterial chromosomal genes, plasmids or phages. Lysogenic phages form part of the chromosome. The toxins are usually liberated from the organism by lysis, but some are shed with outer membrane proteins in outer membrane vesicles. An important non-protein toxin is lipopolysaccharide or endotoxin, which
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Bacterial toxins and Multiple Sclerosis
Journal of the Neurological Sciences, 2007The primary pathogenetic mechanism responsible for the distinctive demyelinating lesions in the Central Nervous System (CNS) in Multiple Sclerosis (MS), first described in remarkable detail by Charcot more than 170 years ago, remains one of the most baffling conundrums in medicine. A possible role for bacterial cell molecules and transportable proteins
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Biology and evolution of bacterial toxin–antitoxin systems
Nature Reviews Microbiology, 2022Dukas Jurenas +2 more
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Synthesis of Erythrocyte Nanodiscs for Bacterial Toxin Neutralization
Angewandte Chemie - International Edition, 2023Ilkoo Noh, Ronnie H Fang, Weiwei Gao
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Bacterial retrons encode phage-defending tripartite toxin–antitoxin systems
Nature, 2022Jacob Bobonis +2 more
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