Results 151 to 160 of about 294,401 (183)
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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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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).
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Microbial diversity – insights from population genetics

Environmental Microbiology, 2007
Summary Although many environmental microbial populations are large and genetically diverse, both the level of diversity and the extent to which it is ecologically relevant remain enigmatic. Because the effective (or long‐term) population size, N e , is one of the parameters
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Molecular Genetics and Microbial Fermentations

1981
The interaction of the field of molecular genetics, especially the part of it termed recombinant DNA technology, with the business of large-scale microbial fermentations is a subject much in the news these days. From the reaction of Wall Street to the recent and prospective public offerings of genetic engineering companies, one would think these ...
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Applied Aspects of Microbial Genetics

1970
For a long time microbiologists held the opinion, that they could solve all of the problems connected with research on microorganisms without the support of any allied sciences, including genetics. The main thesis of such a point of view was that microorganisms are not subject to mutational change but that variation in microorganisms is based on direct
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Microbial Genetics and Biochemistry

Nature, 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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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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