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Microbial Genetics and Biochemistry [PDF]

open access: possibleNature, 1952
The Genetics of Micro-organisms By D. G. Catcheside. Pp. vii + 223. (London: Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons, Ltd., 1951.) 21s. net.
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Microbial Genetics in the USSR

The Quarterly Review of Biology, 1960
A comprehensive review of Soviet microbial genetics during the period 1940-1958, but especially for the years 1950 through 1957, has been based on 297 translated abstracts and 284 full articles. One full paper and 57 abstracts in this total came from the scientific literature of the People's Democracies; the remainder were from the USSR.
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The Microbial Genetics of Antibiotic Cycling

Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology, 2000
AbstractCycling of currently available antibiotics to reduce resistance is an attractive concept. For cycling strategies to be successful, their implementation must have a demonstrable impact on the prevalence of resistance determinants already dispersed throughout the hospital and associated healthcare facilities.
Joseph F. John, Louis B. Rice
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The Ecology and Genetics of Microbial Diversity

Annual Review of Microbiology, 2004
▪ Abstract  Natural communities of microbes are often diverse, a fact that is difficult to reconcile with the action of natural selection in simple, uniform environments. We suggest that this apparent paradox may be resolved by considering the origin and fate of diversity in an explicitly ecological context. Here, we review insights into the ecological
Rees Kassen, Paul B. Rainey
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the genetics of microbial starters

2014
The main bacterial species used in meat fermentation are lactic acid bacteria and coagulase-negative staphylococci. Genetic studies have provided basic knowledge on their metabolic activities and their fitness in meat products. The genome sequences of several starter strains have confirmed their role in the development of the sensorial properties of ...
Jamila Anba-Mondoloni   +8 more
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Population genetics of microbial organisms

Current Opinion in Genetics & Development, 1992
Population data suggest that many parasitic protozoa (e.g. Trypanosoma, Leishmania, Entamoeba and Giardia) reproduce clonally, but this hypothesis has been highly controversial for Plasmodium falciparum. Although reproduction is predominantly clonal in the enteric bacteria Escherichia coli and Salmonella, the level of recombination affecting short (< 1
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Review of Microbial Genetics

1987
The term mutation refers to an abrupt and usually stably inherited change in properties of an organism. Mutations can occur either spontaneously, or may be induced by a mutagen.
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Biochemistry and genetics of microbial xylanases

Current Opinion in Biotechnology, 1996
Xylanases are classified into two major families (10 or F and 11 or G) of glycosyl hydrolases. Both use ion pair catalytic mechanisms and both retain anomeric configuration following hydrolysis. Family 10 xylanases are larger, more complex and produce smaller oligosaccharides; Family 11 xylanases are more specific for xylan. Alkaline-active and extreme-
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Modern Microbial Genetics

2002
Preface. Preface to the First Edition. Introduction. Contributors. SECTION I: DNA METABOLISM. Prokaryotic DNA Replication (W. Firshein). DNA Repair Mechanisms and Mutagenesis (R. Yasbin). Gene Expression and Its Regulation (J. Helmann). Bacteriophage Genetics (B. Guttan & E. Kutter). Bacteriophage and Its Relatives (R. Hendrix).
Uldis N. Streips, Ronald E. Yasbin
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Genetic Determinants of Microbial Resistance to Antibiotics

Clinical Infectious Diseases, 1979
Emergence of antibiotic resistance is related to the ease of mutation, to the extent of exchange of genetic information in bacteria by conjugation, transformation, and transduction, and to the large-scale use of antimicrobial agents in the biosphere. In addition to the development of resistance through chromosomal mutation and exchange of chromosomal ...
Leonard Mayer, Frank E. Young
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