Results 181 to 190 of about 4,847 (207)
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Physicochemical characterization of cyanophage SM-2
Archives of Microbiology, 1984Cyanophage SM-2 which infects two unicellular cyanobacteria, Synechococcus elongatus UTEX 563 and Microcystis aeruginosa NRC-1 (Synechococcus sp. NRC-1) UTEX 1937 has a buoyant density of 1.483 g/cm3, a DNA buoyant density of 1.729 g/cm3 and a guanine + cytosine (G+C) content of 69–70%. The protein patterns of cyanophage SM-2 particles showed 11 bands,
Randall Benson, Eugene Martin
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Dynamics of cyanophage replication
2003This study focuses on the infection characteristics (rate of adsorption, length of lytic cycle and burst size) of two cyanomyoviruses, cyanophage S-PWM1 infecting cultures of Synechococcus DC2 (Marine Cluster A) grown at a high irradiance (299 μmol quanta a m⁻² s⁻¹) and low irradiance (19 μmol quanta m⁻² s⁻¹), and cyanophage S-PWM3 infecting ...
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The Role of tRNAs in Cyanophages
2013Cyanophages, viruses infecting cyanobacteria, play key roles in the life cycle, biodiversity, evolution, and ecological modulations of their hosts. Accumulating evidence that a variety of photosynthesis-related and other host-like genes are found in genomes of cyanophages underscores the close relationship cyanophages have with the gene pools of their ...
Limor-Waisberg Kerena +4 more
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Isolation ofNostoc muscorum cyanophages from a domestic sewage
Microbial Ecology, 1987TwoNostoc muscorum cyanophages were isolated from a domestic sewage in Kuwait. N-1L cyanophage had a hexagonal head with a long tail, while N-2S cyanophage was a short-tailed virus. N-1L cyanophage was active at 50°C and at acidic pH, compared with N-2S, which was more heat stable and active at pH 7.0.
A K, Sallal, N D, Nimr, H F, Al-Sharif
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Cyanophages and Viruses of Eukaryotic Algae
1978The isolation of a virus that infects the blue-green algae (Safferman and Morris, 1963, 1964, a,b) was looked upon with great interest by researchers in a number of fields. The driving force behind Safferman’s search for what we shall call the cyanophages was an interest in underlying factors responsible for algal degeneration.
Louis A. Sherman, R. Malcolm Brown
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Aphanizomenon flos‐aquae: Infection by Cyanophages
Physiologia Plantarum, 1972AbstractThis report presents electron microscopic observations of a virus infection of Aphanizomenon flos‐aquae (L.) Ralfs and investigations on the presence of the causative cyanophage in a moderately eutrophic lake. The results indicate that the cyanophages regulate termination of the water‐bloom of this alga.
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Structure and assembly pattern of a freshwater short-tailed cyanophage Pam1
Structure, 2022Jun-Tao Zhang, Wei-Fang Li, Yuxing Chen
exaly

