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Database Release: PPSDB, a Linked Open Data Knowledge Base for Protist-Prokaryote Symbioses. [PDF]
Seah BKB.
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Effects of adding Allium mongolicum Regel powder and yeast cultures to diet on rumen microbial flora of Tibetan sheep (Ovis aries). [PDF]
Wang C +6 more
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Syphilis Clinical Complexity: A Dual-Case Study Illustrating Diagnostic Dilemmas and Management Strategies. [PDF]
Subhagan H +4 more
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Canadian Public Health Laboratory Network National Syphilis In-Laboratory Serological Testing Recommendations. [PDF]
Morshed M +10 more
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Putting the ‘Eye’ in Spirochaetes
Sexually Transmitted Infections, 2020To the Editor, In 2018, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported an alarming increase in syphilis infection rates, and the numbers have continued to rise since, with rates highest in men who have sex with men (MSM). Ocular syphilis, often seen in association with neurosyphilis, is a rare manifestation of Treponema pallidum infection ...
Cristina Corsini Campioli +6 more
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Fermenter cultivation of intestinal spirochaetes
Journal of Basic Microbiology, 1993AbstractWe cultivated 6 strains of intestinal spirochaetes in a laboratory fermenter under constant conditions (medium, physical‐chemical parameters) in a permanent gas flow. It has been possible to demonstrate that the application of the fermenter technique for the cultivation of spirochaetes is a suitable method which can be easily standardized.
E, Borrmann, T, Blaha, H, Günther
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Spirochaetes in the equine caecum
Research in Veterinary Science, 1985Two morphological types of spirochaete were found in the horse caecum measuring 4 to 6 micron by 0.3 to 0.4 micron and 6 to 8 micron by 0.1 to 0.2 micron. Attempts were made to culture the organisms but none survived subculture beyond the primary isolate. Electron microscopy revealed that many of the organisms were infected by bacteriophages.
M E, Davies, R W, Bingham
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Possible evolutionary significance of spirochaetes
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B. Biological Sciences, 1979Large symbiotic spirochaetes of the family Pillotaceae (e. g. pillotinas) are found in dry wood and subterranean termites (Hollande & Garagozlou 1967). These morphologically distinctive spirochaetes comprise several genera. Some of them contain microtubules within their protoplasmic cylinders.
Margulis, Lynn, Chase, D., To, L. P.
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