Results 181 to 190 of about 16,318 (197)

Extracellular Vesicles in Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryotes: Mechanisms of Inter-Kingdom Communication and Clinical Implications. [PDF]

open access: yesMicroorganisms
Di Naro M   +9 more
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Cultivation of moonmilk-born non-extremophilic Thaum and Euryarchaeota in mixed culture

Anaerobe, 2014
PCR-DGGE, qPCR and sequencing highlighted a quite homogenous archaeal community prevailing in secondary calcite deposits, so-called moonmilk, within the cold alpine Hundalm cave in Tyrol (Austria). Furthermore, the depth profile of this moonmilk could prove that the Archaea are located in oxygen-rich near- and oxygen-depleted sub-surface layers.
Christoph, Reitschuler   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Distribution of Cren- and Euryarchaeota in Scots Pine Mycorrhizospheres and Boreal Forest Humus

Microbial Ecology, 2007
Archaeal 16S rRNA gene sequences have been found in a variety of moderate-temperature habitats including soil and rhizospheres. In this study, the differences of archaeal communities associated with Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) short roots, different types of mycorrhizospheric compartments, and uncolonized boreal forest humus were tested by direct ...
Bomberg, Malin, Timonen, Sari
openaire   +3 more sources

Phylum All. Euryarchaeota phy. nov.

2001
The phylum currently consists of seven classes: the Methanobacteria, the Methanococci, the Halobacteria, the Thermoplasmata, the Thermococci, the Archaeoglobi, and the Methanopyri. With the sole exception of the Methanococci, which is subdivided into three orders, each class contains a single order.
George M. Garrity   +37 more
openaire   +1 more source

Untangling Genomes from Metagenomes: Revealing an Uncultured Class of Marine Euryarchaeota

Science, 2012
Mystery of an Unextreme Microbe Metagenomics has given us glimpses into the huge diversity of microorganisms that are the engines of Earth's elemental cycling. These kinds of surveys can supply a good idea of the dominant organisms in ecosystems, but, because the majority of environmental microbes are difficult to
Vaughn, Iverson   +5 more
openaire   +2 more sources

The Distribution and Diversity of Euryarchaeota in Termite Guts

2007
Publisher Summary The Euryarchaeota are a critical component of all termite guts, acting as hydrogen sinks in both lower and higher termites. In lower termites and in the wood- and fungus-feeding higher termites, the role of the methanogens appears to be to mop up trace hydrogen.
openaire   +2 more sources

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