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1 ctivated potassium channel from thermophilic archaebacteria.
2 acetyl-CoA biosynthesis in the methanogenic archaebacteria.
3 oximately 50 degrees C) of thermoacidophilic archaebacteria.
4 nd translation factors is largely unknown in archaebacteria.
5 onserved proteins in other eukaryotes and in archaebacteria.
6 lar to genes found in diverse eukaryotes and archaebacteria.
7 abditis elegans, mammals and four species of archaebacteria.
8 her members in fission yeast, nematodes, and archaebacteria.
9 cident with the divergence of eukaryotes and archaebacteria.
10 ound in various prokaryotes, eukaryotes, and archaebacteria.
11 early equidistant from metazoans, fungi, and Archaebacteria.
12 tor that was retained by both eubacteria and archaebacteria.
13 organization as seen in other eukaryotes and Archaebacteria.
17 es (phlACB) conserved between eubacteria and archaebacteria and a gene (phlD) encoding a polyketide s
27 Z(S)) is the only one found in bacteria and archaebacteria and is also present in some eukaryotes.
28 or 2 that is conserved in all eukaryotes and archaebacteria and is the target of diphtheria toxin, is
29 ich seems to be the ancestral metabolism for archaebacteria and methanogenesis (which somehow then de
30 e might have biological roles have come from archaebacteria and platyhelminths, which present opsin-l
31 tionally encoded in the tRNAs of eukaryotes, archaebacteria and some bacteria and must be added by a
40 e species of the eukaryotes, prokaryotes and archaebacteria, and from mitochondrial and chloroplast o
42 Complete genomes of yeast, gram eubacteria, archaebacteria, and mitochondria do not contain paralogo
45 gram-positive bacteria, and eight species of archaebacteria are specifically related in terms of gene
46 heir placement in a separate domain; (v) the archaebacteria are specifically related to one another b
47 a as one group and within the eukaryotes and archaebacteria as a second group, but compared between t
49 arate mono/holophyly of the domains Archaea (archaebacteria), Bacteria (eubacteria) and Eucarya (euka
50 edicted to encode proteins related to D10 in archaebacteria, bacteriophages and in viruses known to i
52 ve been identified in certain eubacteria and archaebacteria but, in each case, the proteasome-contain
53 eubacteria are more abundant than those from archaebacteria, but the latter are functionally more imp
57 yze a diverse array of DNA rearrangements in archaebacteria, eubacteria, and yeast and belongs to the
58 pyridoxine genes, but are found in the same archaebacteria, eubacteria, fungi, and plants that conta
62 equencing of the complete genomes of several archaebacteria has shown that MCM proteins are also pres
63 50 S subunit of Haloarcula marismortui, the archaebacteria homolog of yeast YL37a, L37ae, coordinate
64 structural analysis of a Rad50 homolog from archaebacteria illuminated the catalytic core of the enz
65 ort for the notion that protein synthesis in archaebacteria is initiated with methionine and not with
66 ein synthesis in eukaryotic cytoplasm and in archaebacteria is initiated with methionine, whereas, th
67 third domain of life, the Archaea (formerly Archaebacteria), is populated by a physiologically diver
68 rhodopsin-I (SRI), a phototaxis receptor of archaebacteria, is a retinal-binding protein that exists
70 e thermophilic cenancestor of eukaryotes and archaebacteria (jointly called neomurans), radically mod
74 g of introns in eukaryotes, and 11 predicted archaebacteria-like Sm and like-Sm core peptides, which
81 Experimental findings obtained with MPC from archaebacteria suggest that degradation of proteins by t
82 fraction E (PLFE) from the thermoacidophilic archaebacteria Sulfolobus acidocaldarius have been studi
85 g evidence that methane is being consumed by archaebacteria that are phylogenetically distinct from k
87 st that the mevalonate pathway is germane to archaebacteria, that the DXP pathway is germane to eubac
88 ophilic and mesophilic eubacteria as well as archaebacteria, the human-disease pathogens Treponema pa
89 had been acquired by sulfidogenic wall-less archaebacteria (thermoplasmas) after aerotolerant cytopl
93 that is conserved in organisms ranging from archaebacteria to yeast and that suggests a model for in
94 e intracellular environment within an Asgard archaebacteria, which have been studied for decades as a