Results 281 to 290 of about 160,837 (298)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Scandinavian Journal of Rheumatology, 1975
Mycoplasmas are the smallest and simplest of all free living cells. They belong together with the bacterial L-forms in the class Mollicutes. At least 35 different species have been isolated, eight of them from man. A characteristic is their latent occurrence on the mucous membranes of the host from year to year.
openaire +3 more sources
Mycoplasmas are the smallest and simplest of all free living cells. They belong together with the bacterial L-forms in the class Mollicutes. At least 35 different species have been isolated, eight of them from man. A characteristic is their latent occurrence on the mucous membranes of the host from year to year.
openaire +3 more sources
The ultrastructure of mycoplasma and mycoplasma-like organisms
Micron (1969), 1970Abstract The ultrastructural features of mycoplasma and mycoplasma-like organisms seen in thin sections and from negatively stained preparations are briefly reviewed. Some of the recent findings showing the presence of mycoplasma as intracellular structures in certain diseased plant cells are discussed and compared to the morphology of animal ...
openaire +2 more sources
Mycoplasma pneumoniae and Other Human Mycoplasmas
1998Mycoplasmas are small pliable pleomorph bacteria lacking cell walls. They were first called pleuropneumonialike organisms (PPLOs) for the disease they caused in cattle. The first human isolation of a mycoplasma, probably Mycoplasma hominis, was made from a Bartilin’s gland in 1937.
openaire +2 more sources