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Serological Identification of Mollicutes [PDF]
Mollicutes are bacteria without cell walls, flagella, pili, or other structural components commonly found in other prokaryotes. In addition, the mollicute genome is the smallest among all other self-replicating organisms. As a consequence of these characteristics, mollicutes possess limited biosynthetic capabilities and are devoid of many of the ...
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2002
Many commonly used bacteriological terms are far from being well defined and in scientific papers these terms may be used with different meanings15, 89. One of the purposes of bacterial taxonomy is to avoid confusion by creating a database with a common language for bacteriologists.
Bertil Pettersson, Karl-Erik Johansson
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Many commonly used bacteriological terms are far from being well defined and in scientific papers these terms may be used with different meanings15, 89. One of the purposes of bacterial taxonomy is to avoid confusion by creating a database with a common language for bacteriologists.
Bertil Pettersson, Karl-Erik Johansson
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Lampyridae (Coleoptera): A plethora of mollicute associations
Microbial Ecology, 1992Beetles (Coleoptera) harbor many species ofAcholeplasma andSpiroplasma (division Tenericutes, class Mollicutes). Mollicutes were isolated from guts and/or hemocoels of firefly beetles (Lampyridae) from the United States (Maryland and West Virginia), Ecuador, and Tobago.
D L Roset+9 more
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Comparative Genome Analysis of the Mollicutes [PDF]
The Mollicutes are Eubacteria that have probably been derived from Lactobacilli, Bacilli, and Streptococci by regressive evolution and genome reduction to produce the smallest and simplest free-living and self-replicating cells. The life style is in general Chapausitic. Structurally, the Mollicutes are characterized by the complete lack of a cell wall,
Mikita Suyama+6 more
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1993
Mollicutes are bacteria that lack a cell wall, one of the principal cellular and morphological structures of most prokaryotes. These wall-less organisms, earlier called either “pleuropneumonia-like organisms” or “mycoplasmas”, are also the smallest free-living, self-replicating forms currently known in biology. They share a small size and filterability
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Mollicutes are bacteria that lack a cell wall, one of the principal cellular and morphological structures of most prokaryotes. These wall-less organisms, earlier called either “pleuropneumonia-like organisms” or “mycoplasmas”, are also the smallest free-living, self-replicating forms currently known in biology. They share a small size and filterability
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Heterogeneity of the Members of the Class Mollicutes
Journal of Infectious Diseases, 19732. Lemcke, R. M. A serological comparison of various species of Mycoplasma by an agar gel doublediffusion technique. J. Gen. Microbiol. 38:91-100, 1965. 3. Kenny, G. E. Serological comparison of ten glycolytic Mycoplasma species. J. Bacteriol. 98:10441055, 1969. 4. Tully, J. G., Razin, S. Acholeplasma axanthum sp.
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Resources for mining mollicute genomes
2005International ...
Barre, A+3 more
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Transcriptome and Proteome Analyses of Mollicutes
2002The publication of the first complete genome sequence of a bacterium (Haemophilus influenzae) in 1995 (33) marked a turning point in the genetic analysis of cells and organisms. Before that, at the most, only subsets of the cellular gene repertoire were known and could be analyzed.
Carl-Ulrich Zimmermann+3 more
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Rapid Detection of Phloem-Restricted Mollicutes
1993Three different types of pathogenic prokaryotes (spiroplasmas, MLOs, and BLOs) can be found in the phloem of plants. They are more precisely localized in the sieve tubes of the phloem tissue, i.e. the vessels in which the photosynthetically-enriched sap circulates.
Garnier, M.+3 more
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