Results 261 to 270 of about 60,638 (294)
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Flow Cytometry for Filamentous Fungi

2020
Flow cytometry is a powerful high-throughput method, which enables a fast and multi-parameter analysis of single cells and particles. A plethora of different dyes for flow cytometry are available to label different parts of a cell in addition to in vivo markers like fluorescent proteins.
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Otomycosis due to Filamentous Fungi

Mycopathologia, 2011
Otomycosis is common throughout the world but barely studied in Spain. Our objective was to determine the microbiological and epidemiological characteristics of this pathology in Cadiz (Spain) between 2005 and 2010. Samples from patients with suspicion of otomycosis underwent a direct microscopic examination and culture on different media for fungi and
Lidia, García-Agudo   +5 more
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Chromosome visualisation in filamentous fungi

Journal of Microbiological Methods, 2006
Many attempts have been made to study the chromosomes of fungi, but a major problem is that fungal nuclei are so small. Fungal chromosomes are at the lowest resolution of light microscopy; thus few attempts to visualise fungal chromosomes have been successful. Fungi examined have been mainly Ascomycotina.
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Morphology and productivity of filamentous fungi

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology, 2005
Cultivation processes involving filamentous fungi have been optimised for decades to obtain high product yields. Several bulk chemicals like citric acid and penicillin are produced this way. A simple adaptation of cultivation parameters for new production processes is not possible though.
L H, Grimm   +3 more
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Modelling the growth of filamentous fungi

2005
Despite the considerable industrial importance of filamentous fungi there have been very few attempts to model the complex growth process of these microorganisms. With a new generation of high performance, computerized bioreactors and new analytical techniques it is possible to obtain the necessary experimental data for setting up reliable structured ...
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MATING TYPE IN FILAMENTOUS FUNGI

Annual Review of Genetics, 1997
▪ Abstract  Mating type genes regulate sexual compatibility and sexual reproduction in fungi. This review focuses on recent molecular analyses of well-characterized mating systems from representative ascomycete (Neurospora crassa, Podospora anserina) and basidiomycete (Ustilago maydis, Coprinus cinereus, Schizophyllum commune) fungi.
J W, Kronstad, C, Staben
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Proteome Studies of Filamentous Fungi

2011
The continued fast pace of fungal genome sequence generation has enabled proteomic analysis of a wide variety of organisms that span the breadth of the Kingdom Fungi. There is some phylogenetic bias to the current catalog of fungi with reasonable DNA sequence databases (genomic or EST) that could be analyzed at a global proteomic level.
Scott E, Baker, Ellen A, Panisko
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Mitochondrial dynamics in filamentous fungi

Fungal Genetics and Biology, 2002
Mitochondria are essential organelles of eukaryotic cells. They grow continuously throughout the cell cycle and are inherited by daughter cells upon cell division. Inheritance of mitochondria and maintenance of mitochondrial distribution and morphology require active transport of the organelles along the cytoskeleton and depend on membrane fission and ...
Benedikt, Westermann, Holger, Prokisch
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Population genetics of filamentous fungi

Antonie van Leeuwenhoek, 1994
Population genetics aims to understand causes and consequences of the genetic structure of populations, i.e. distributions of genetic variants in space and time. Among the most important determinants of the genetic population structure is the genetic system itself, which is the collection of processes and mechanisms responsible for the transmission of ...
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Distribution of sterigmatocystin in filamentous fungi

Fungal Biology, 2011
During the last 50y, the carcinogenic mycotoxin sterigmatocystin (ST) has been reported in several phylogenetically and phenotypically different genera: Aschersonia, Aspergillus, Bipolaris, Botryotrichum, Chaetomium, Emericella, Eurotium, Farrowia, Fusarium, Humicola, Moelleriella, Monocillium and Podospora.
Rank, Christian   +5 more
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