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1 tic resistance determinants in Gram-negative bacteria.
2  fungal and viral components, in addition to bacteria.
3 most small molecules to accumulate inside GN bacteria.
4 m (ENS) exists in close proximity to luminal bacteria.
5 acy with the bulk extract against pathogenic bacteria.
6 osynthesis of phospholipids in Gram-positive bacteria.
7 st immune cells that function to contain the bacteria.
8 6 binding proteins (FKBPs), and parvulins in bacteria.
9 e apicoplast; mimicking its activity against bacteria.
10 g binding of IgA to commensal and pathogenic bacteria.
11 FuFAs and their intermediates in two related bacteria.
12  is carried out by the elongated form of the bacteria.
13 eae), but no significant lack of butyrogenic bacteria.
14 xpressed short open reading frames (ORFs) in bacteria.
15 ucens strain GS-15, a model Fe(III)-reducing Bacteria.
16 is is organized differently from other model bacteria.
17 virulence and horizontally-acquired genes in bacteria.
18 ts and virulence in several human pathogenic bacteria.
19 m syntrophic consortia with sulfate-reducing bacteria.
20 c TA-mediated responses in diverse genera of bacteria.
21 at digests fucose moieties) harbored by milk bacteria.
22 are directly and indirectly mediated by oral bacteria.
23 nism of macrolide resistance used by several bacteria.
24 a key virulence determinant of gram-negative bacteria.
25 bioagent to prevent the spread of pathogenic bacteria.
26 lymers previously observed in exoflagellated bacteria.
27 ntified in keratitis caused by Gram-negative bacteria.
28  to high enough levels to kill intracellular bacteria.
29  superfamily are ubiquitous in Gram-negative bacteria.
30  bilayer membrane, produced by magnetotactic bacteria.
31 s can be localized in nanaerobically growing bacteria.
32 nctionally interact with subunits from other bacteria.
33 ive functional and structural drivers of STM bacteria.
34 get of beta-lactam antibiotics in pathogenic bacteria.
35  movements, a conserved feature in twitching bacteria.
36 esis, a process essential to the survival of bacteria.
37 with reduced abundance of immune-stimulating bacteria(10,11) protects C9orf72-mutant mice from premat
38                                         Most bacteria (60/61 [98.4%]) detected by standard methods we
39 tients, with a predominance of Gram-positive bacteria (93%).
40 h between partner genotypes and increases as bacteria adapt to their local host.
41                    Indeed, mecA protects the bacteria against increased cell-envelope permeability un
42 on in biomedically and industrially relevant bacteria and achieved target- and species-specific integ
43       Copper is a required micronutrient for bacteria and an essential cofactor for redox-active cupr
44  expands the known phylogenetic diversity of bacteria and archaea by 44% and is broadly available for
45                                         Many bacteria and archaea do not produce sphingolipids but th
46                         The CRISPR system in bacteria and archaea provides adaptive immunity against
47 nt 16S rRNA gene analysis revealed that both bacteria and archaea were rich in their diversity. The t
48  and eukaryotic microalgae) and prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea), 2 microbial groups that play a ma
49 ith pronounced differences for Gram-negative bacteria and Candida species.
50  validated by analysis of different types of bacteria and compared with commercially available MBT Bi
51 h should be generalizable to a wide array of bacteria and find application in medical, research, and
52 t progress in the elucidation of the role of bacteria and fungi and their metabolic products on disea
53 trifluralin does occur, and pure cultures of bacteria and fungi capable of partially degrading the mo
54 tern-style diet compared to mice fed control bacteria and had alterations in hepatic lipids, includin
55                Co-evolution of gut commensal bacteria and humans has ensured that the micronutrient n
56 onditions that threaten the viability of the bacteria and impede the establishment of infection.
57 standing betaOMP biogenesis in Gram-negative bacteria and in mitochondria.
58 antibiotic that acts mainly on gram-positive bacteria and is restricted to the gut, potentiated the R
59     Wounded skin models were inoculated with bacteria and left to incubate.
60 ited increased susceptibility to Pseudomonas bacteria and Mucorales fungi, which could be rescued by
61  inhibition of proliferation and motility of bacteria and phages are the key to formation of the obse
62 migrating microbial community coexistence of bacteria and phages implies their co-propagation in spac
63 esses, creates endosymbiosis with beneficial bacteria and provides tolerance against a combination of
64              These results shed new light on bacteria and SCFAs, which may promote the development of
65 luding membrane phospholipids from cells and bacteria and surfactant phospholipids.
66  play critical roles in interactions between bacteria and their immediate environments.
67                   We identified specific gut bacteria and their metabolic functions associated with E
68 microrobots, ranging from tailor-made motile bacteria and tiny bubble-propelled microengines to hybri
69 igated the effects of RH on the viability of bacteria and viruses in both suspended aerosols and stat
70             While much has been learned from bacteria and yeast about translational regulation, much
71                                      Enteric bacteria and/or their products are necessary for doxorub
72 is an essential process in all Gram-negative bacteria, and considering the looming crisis of widespre
73  analyse the abundance and diversity of oral bacteria, and pH, lactate, glucose, nitrate and nitrite
74 crobial interactions, whereby metal-reducing bacteria are able to reduce soluble U(VI) to insoluble U
75                                              Bacteria are able to sense these changes in the mechanic
76       Anammox (anaerobic ammonium oxidation) bacteria are important for the nitrogen cycle in both na
77 art techniques for screening of electrogenic bacteria are inefficient, and often prevent rapid, high-
78                                              Bacteria are key contributors to ecosystem functioning,
79 els, a significant fraction of intracellular bacteria are non-growing.
80                                              Bacteria are protected by a polymer of peptidoglycan tha
81 teractions between plants and soil fungi and bacteria are ubiquitous and have large effects on indivi
82 of T7 phage to replicate in nitrogen-starved bacteria as a biological probe of E. coli cell function
83 ions for at least 12 days and to function in bacteria associated with a primary colonic epithelial mo
84  of deadly pathogens and multidrug-resistant bacteria at an alarmingly increased rate, bacteriophages
85 system, both GO and MGO inhibited the target bacteria at concentrations significantly lower than thos
86  differentiation between active and inactive bacteria at single cell level is urgently needed in many
87 scence imaging to study live interactions of bacteria at the membrane-substrate level.
88  the specific and ultrasensitive analysis of bacteria at their single-cell levels within a 3 h proced
89                                              Bacteria, bacteriophages that prey upon them, and mobile
90 rdial metabolic pathways, already present in bacteria before aerobic respiration evolved, offer a sol
91                 The difference in persistent bacteria between in vitro and human sputum prior to chem
92 roficient extension produced regular CLPs in bacteria but failed to form stable nucleocapsids in hepa
93 on can predict transcriptional regulation in bacteria, but in eukaryotes, chromatin accessibility and
94 iotic against a broad range of Gram-positive bacteria, but its medical applications have been limited
95 h are crucial phenotypes of lignin-utilizing bacteria, but their interrelationships remain poorly und
96  persistence of antimicrobial-resistant (AR) bacteria, but their relative contribution likely differs
97 e in the survival of beta-lactam susceptible bacteria by acting as the first line of defense against
98         Electric field treatment inactivates bacteria by physically disrupting the integrity of the c
99  environments with limited nutrients, motile bacteria can actively migrate towards locations of riche
100 enerate 'artificial' marine snow, into which bacteria can be incorporated to facilitate extensive upt
101 r combination therapy against drug resistant bacteria can be realized on an integrated microfluidic d
102                           Many intracellular bacteria can establish chronic infection and persist in
103 nfection of the root hairs by soil symbiotic bacteria, collectively referred to as rhizobia, and the
104                                              Bacteria come in an array of shapes and sizes, but the m
105 th of functional databases for environmental bacteria compared to model organisms, and the technical
106     The outer membrane (OM) of gram-negative bacteria confers innate resistance to toxins and antibio
107                                Magnetotactic bacteria constitute a remarkable example of living organ
108 TSP also cross-reacted with other pathogenic bacteria containing Pse on their surface polysaccharides
109 idated numerous membranous structures inside bacteria-containing inclusions.
110 tudies are needed to determine whether these bacteria contribute to pathogenesis of CD.
111 ) escape into the colon, where gut commensal bacteria convert them into various intestinal BAs(2) tha
112 cence microscopy and TEM revealed indigenous bacteria could obtain these vectors from E. coli through
113 dard Limulus Amoebocyte lysate assay in real bacteria culture containing naturally occurring LPS, wit
114                                         Many bacteria cycle between sessile and motile forms in which
115                                              Bacteria, cytokines, leukocytes, and hematopoietic precu
116                                  Rather, the bacteria-derived prothrombin activator vWbp was identifi
117  neutrophilia but does not affect numbers of bacteria detected.
118 ad of LVS infection between macrophages, but bacteria did not return to vacuoles such as lysosomes or
119   To advance the scientific understanding of bacteria-driven mercury (Hg) transformation processes in
120 longer timescales in S. pneumoniae and other bacteria drives high within-host pneumococcal genetic di
121  spatially ordered PG synthesis in ovococcal bacteria during cell division.
122 crobiome composition, as well as predominant bacteria during respiratory illnesses, and we correlated
123 tes, the specialized cells housing symbiotic bacteria, during their cell death.
124 3), driven by the presence of gut-associated bacteria (e.g., species of the Lachnospiraceae and Enter
125 es the transfer of resistance genes to other bacteria, e.g. to the ones living in the human gut.
126 for the efficient and sensitive detection of bacteria embedded in human tissues and for specimens con
127 er, it is clear that slow-growing subsets of bacteria emerge during infection and that these subsets
128 vestigated cytochromes P450 from mammals and bacteria enabled us to identify those residues of critic
129 iverse yet a distinct group of environmental bacteria encompassing important human and animal pathoge
130                   Here, we show that starved bacteria encountering new resources can break this trade
131                          Among Gram-negative bacteria, Escherichia coli were predominant.
132  on antibiotic resistance was phenocopied in bacteria exposed to atmospheric hypoxia.
133    We demonstrate why this is the case using bacteria-expressed proteins: the DHX30N-NS1 RBD interact
134 ltaneous readout of fluorescent signals from bacteria expressing fluorescent proteins and demonstrate
135  mobile and can shed antimicrobial-resistant bacteria for extended periods, gulls may facilitate tran
136 demonstrate the usefulness of bioluminescent bacteria for quantifying feeding and generating insights
137 e calcium ion channel has been identified in bacteria for the first time.
138    Confocal microscopy revealed in situ that bacteria formed a dense outer layer at the liquid-air in
139  also promotes the growth of unhealthful gut bacteria, fostering, among other things, the production
140                                 The ratio of bacteria found in the extravascular space to those in th
141 hylococcus epidermidis are the most abundant bacteria found on the skin of patients with atopic derma
142     Nevertheless, approximately 200 types of bacteria from the oral microbiota have remained uncultur
143 mmetric outer membrane (OM) of Gram-negative bacteria functions as a selective permeability barrier t
144 y asymmetric outer membrane of Gram-negative bacteria functions in the defense against cytotoxic subs
145 oaches have the potential to detect viruses, bacteria, fungi, parasites, and archaea, including organ
146  increase in antibiotic resistant pathogenic bacteria has become a global threat, which besides the d
147    The prevalence of such genes in commensal bacteria has been increased in recent years by the wide
148  cultures of the dominant lineages of marine bacteria has contributed to an ongoing debate over the e
149                   However, how histones kill bacteria has remained elusive.
150                               Studying model bacteria has revealed aspects of chromosome folding that
151 ttle against mobile genetic elements (MGEs), bacteria have developed several defense mechanisms, some
152 scuss sophisticated adaptive strategies that bacteria have developed to enhance their survival during
153              Not surprisingly, Gram-negative bacteria have evolved diverse posttranslational defense
154                                              Bacteria have evolved mechanisms to escape neutrophils,
155                                              Bacteria have evolved sophisticated adaptive immune syst
156                                              Bacteria have evolved systems dedicated to interbacteria
157                                         Most bacteria have one pathway or the other, but the Gram-pos
158 environments of the gut, with some symbiotic bacteria having evolved traits to invade the epithelial
159            Simultaneous sputum liquefaction, bacteria heat inactivation (99 degrees C/30 min), and en
160                Studies of Ro60 RNPs in other bacteria hint at additional functions, since the most co
161 are essential for clearance of CDC-producing bacteria; however, the mechanisms by which these cells e
162 se of antibiotic resistance in Gram-negative bacteria, i.e., the deactivation of the most widely used
163 rRNA gene sequencing of SIgA-coated/uncoated bacteria (IgA-Biome) was conducted on stool and saliva s
164 acious therapy for fermenting, gram-negative bacteria in blood culture(s) if they were afebrile for 2
165                          It may be caused by bacteria in deep skin structures unsusceptible to surfac
166 alth, understanding metabolic changes within bacteria in environments where growth substrate availabi
167 carbon substrates and other nutrients to the bacteria in exchange for fixed nitrogen.
168 and the contribution of metabolically active bacteria in fundamental processes triggering environment
169 ndicating functionally specialized roles for bacteria in oncogenic communities.
170 c relationship between legumes and rhizobium bacteria in root nodules has a high demand for iron, and
171  pattern associated with sulfur-metabolizing bacteria in stool was associated with an increased risk
172 earned regarding the effectiveness of LTP on bacteria in suspension in liquids, and especially on por
173 e infectious associations between phages and bacteria in the human intestine, which is essential info
174 urvival rates compared to those of wild-type bacteria in the infected macrophages.
175 tions beyond the capture of lignin-utilizing bacteria, in the isolation of other microorganisms with
176 ontrol group, the relative abundance of some bacteria, including Actinobacteria, Chloroflexi, and Sac
177 rug-resistant and extensively drug-resistant bacteria, including ESBL, carbapenem- and colistin-resis
178 identification by methods routinely used for bacteria, including matrix-assisted laser desorption/ion
179 he expansion of lysozyme-sensitive mucolytic bacteria, including Ruminococcus gnavus, a Crohn's disea
180                                              Bacteria-infecting viruses, called phages, can encode qu
181                                     However, bacteria infiltrated into the plant tissue are as virule
182 ption initiation in phylogenetically diverse bacteria, inspiring this Review to examine unifying and
183               Thus, the formulation of these bacteria into microcapsules using appropriate biomateria
184 read of antibiotic resistance (AR) genes and bacteria into the environment.
185 ults demonstrate regulation of cell shape in bacteria is a mechanism to increase fitness in planktoni
186           The cell envelope of Gram-negative bacteria is a multilayered structure essential for bacte
187  The ability to express genes ectopically in bacteria is essential for diverse academic and industria
188    Although the emergence of phage-resistant bacteria is likely inevitable, there is a growing body o
189 re fine-tuned by diverse cues from commensal bacteria is not well understood.
190                     Finally, control of INA+ bacteria is shown to reduce STB.
191 ndance of different rhodopsins in cultivated bacteria isolated from hot and arid ecological niches.
192 ned transferable antimicrobial resistance in bacteria isolated from marine salmon farms, but much les
193 absolute abundance of lactic and acetic acid bacteria (LAB/AAB) and bacterial taxa of predicted envir
194 logs of photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic bacteria lack the C-terminal prosequence, suggesting it
195 oxide value (PV), malondialdehyde (MDA), and bacteria levels.
196 been characterized across a diverse group of bacteria, mainly human commensals and pathogens.
197 ether, unculturable periodontitis-associated bacteria may play an important role both in the presence
198          Data suggest that temperate adapted bacteria may replace cold water taxa under a future scen
199 les (tap water, blood serum, and saliva) and bacteria media (blank broth, Staphylococcus aureus, and
200 sfection; however, its role in Gram-negative bacteria-mediated NLRP3 inflammasome activation remains
201 the flies were challenged with Gram-positive bacteria Micrococcus luteus In this setting, osa knockdo
202                                Gram-negative bacteria, mitochondria, and chloroplasts all possess an
203                   Thus, symbiotic intestinal bacteria modulate antiviral immunity and levels of circu
204 ge of the products encoded in foreign genes, bacteria must overcome the silencing effects of H-NS.
205 id synthesis, is essential for Gram-negative bacteria, mycobacteria and apicomplexans(2,3).
206                                In the social bacteria Myxococcus xanthus, we know that twitching moti
207 f nodulation, intracellular accommodation of bacteria, nodule oxygen homeostasis, the control of bact
208 mechanisms, and structures of these genes in bacteria of human and animal origin, studies on the prev
209                                              Bacteria of the genus Shigella cause shigellosis, a seve
210   Enabled by our ability to count individual bacteria on a large sensor surface, we demonstrate an ex
211 lysis GA-map Dysbiosis test, targeting >=300 bacteria on different taxonomic levels.
212 evirus B3, and reovirus can be stabilized by bacteria or bacterial polysaccharides, limiting inactiva
213 d in increased paracellular translocation of bacteria or bacterial products through the small intesti
214    The relative gene functional potential of bacteria or fungi reflected their diversity patterns and
215 e also noted correlations between intratumor bacteria or their predicted functions with tumor types a
216 ect cytoplasmic dsDNA from incoming viruses, bacteria, or self.
217 solated from the human lactic acid commensal bacteria Pediococcus pentosaceus suppressed Ag-specific
218 uses that infect the globally abundant SAR11 bacteria (pelagiphages) were reported to be an important
219 r in placental tissue can exceed one billion bacteria per gram.
220 matory response syndrome (SIRS), spontaneous bacteria peritonitis (SBP), and pneumonia; and O: the CL
221 iromes from the same fecal samples, the host bacteria-phage associations are illustrated for both tem
222 LOTUS domain-RNA interaction is conserved in bacteria, plants and animals, comprising the most ancien
223                      For these fungi, helper bacteria play an important role in the establishment of
224            The community composition of lung bacteria predicted ventilator-free days (P = 0.003), dri
225 During chronic infections and in microbiota, bacteria predominantly colonize their hosts as multicell
226          These polymers afford the producing bacteria protection from a wide range of physical, chemi
227  The human gut microbiome is a collection of bacteria, protozoa, fungi, and viruses that coexist in o
228              Nitrogen-fixing nodule-inducing bacteria provide nutritional services.
229 aging the depletion of fluorescently labeled bacteria provides information on both the distribution a
230 erved in rare (R(2) = 0.65) than in abundant bacteria (R(2) = 0.08).
231 er nitrogen availability and decreased fungi:bacteria ratios) rather than direct temperature effects.
232  cells died after five days but a variety of bacteria received and carried the vector for over 60 day
233                                      Whereas bacteria recover from the pore-forming effects of LL-37,
234              To ensure their survival, these bacteria rely on chemosensory pathways to sense and resp
235 y conservation, and filament growth in cable bacteria remains enigmatic.
236 occi, other gram-positive, and gram-negative bacteria, respectively.
237 is total protection was achieved despite the bacteria's relative resistance to ciprofloxacin and wher
238 eactions in only 4.5-6 h using only 3 muL of bacteria sample of each reaction (as opposed to 24 h and
239         Quorum sensing is a process in which bacteria secrete and sense a diffusible molecule, thereb
240 h17 cell-inducing taxa segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB).
241 s have, in turn, stimulated studies in other bacteria, shedding light on how protein function and cel
242 munity, whether tumor elimination depends on bacteria-specific or tumor-specific immunity is unknown.
243                     Unlike flagella of other bacteria, spirochetes' periplasmic flagella possess a co
244 two clinically isolated multi-drug-resistant bacteria strains (including carbapenem-resistant Escheri
245 ein extract was effective against any of the bacteria strains tested at antimicrobial assays.
246  organic acids, so it is not surprising that bacteria such as Streptomyces lividans can activate many
247  community was dominated by sulfur oxidising bacteria, suggesting that primary production in the sedi
248 cochemical treatments, a higher affinity for bacteria than simulated intestinal epithelium, a valuabl
249 age selective pressure promotes mutations in bacteria that allow them to subvert phage infection, but
250 iotics experienced by potentially pathogenic bacteria that are asymptomatically colonizing the microb
251 al gene transfer events from different donor bacteria that are part of the mammalian microbiome.
252  to gut microbiota, such as depletion of gut bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) th
253 t provide resistance against colonization by bacteria that promote inflammation.
254 re signaling molecules produced by rhizobial bacteria that trigger the nodulation process in legumes,
255                                           In bacteria, the best conserved promoter feature is the AT-
256 cell-free gene expression systems from model bacteria, the development of cell-free platforms from no
257                 Of the long ncRNAs unique to bacteria, the OLE (ornate, large, extremophilic) RNA cla
258                                              Bacteria then traffic to the draining lymph node (dLN) w
259 ive halogenation of unactivated C-H bonds in bacteria, they remain uncharacterized in the plant kingd
260 confers survival benefits; among unicellular bacteria, this can lead to complex developmental behavio
261 (iNOS) induction, increased dissemination of bacteria throughout the organs, and rapid death.
262                                  Engineering bacteria to clean-up oil spills is rapidly advancing but
263 cific global responses against opportunistic bacteria to combat microbial incursion and maintain host
264 thways used by two phylogenetically distinct bacteria to degrade three different plasticizers (i.e.,
265     High nutrient concentrations allowed the bacteria to strongly alter the chemical environment, cau
266 Vibrionaceae are almost unique as a group of bacteria to study in microbiology: they are genomically,
267 ialized secretion systems allow a variety of bacteria to thrive in specific host environments.
268                                       Marine bacteria transform DMSP via two competing pathways with
269 We also show that the persistence of biofilm bacteria trapped in NETs is facilitated by S. aureus nuc
270         For the sake of energy preservation, bacteria, upon transition to stationary phase, tone down
271                                        Thus, bacteria use outer membrane vesiculation to exchange cel
272  molecular pathogenesis of ETEC in which the bacteria use toxin to drive up-regulation of cellular ta
273                               In particular, bacteria use virulence factors, such as secreted toxins
274                   By characterizing sediment bacteria using 16S rRNA sequences, bacterial community c
275     To avoid iron-mediated oxidative stress, bacteria utilize iron-dependent global regulators to sen
276                                         Most bacteria utilize two types of synthases that polymerize
277                          The pattern of rare bacteria varied from host to host and was largely differ
278  had no statistically significant effects on bacteria, viruses, or the prevalence and quantity of ind
279 i, the cross-habitat distribution pattern of bacteria was more strongly driven by habitat type.
280                 The lower abundance of these bacteria was reflected in decreased abundance of the gen
281                                              Bacteria were automatically mixed for 10 min with serial
282                                              Bacteria were evaluated in silico and in vitro using hum
283         Taxonomic predictions for tick-borne bacteria were exceptionally accurate, as independently v
284 e also identified by BFPP, and 92 additional bacteria were identified by BFPP alone, including 22/92
285                                              Bacteria were identified in 70% of patients, with a pred
286               Single plant cells infected by bacteria were selected and sampled directly from the tis
287 onest bacterial pathogens detected; atypical bacteria were uncommon.
288  decreased Bacteroidia- and Clostridia-class bacteria, whereas after treatment, responders' microbiom
289  The biological diversity of the unicellular bacteria-whether assessed by shape, food, metabolism, or
290 eplication vacuole of Legionella pneumophila bacteria, which requires ERGIC-derived membrane.
291 , azelaic acid enhances growth of beneficial bacteria while simultaneously inhibiting growth of oppor
292 stems are well-studied defense mechanisms of bacteria, while phages have evolved covalent modificatio
293                   CRISPR-Cas systems provide bacteria with adaptive immunity against viruses.
294 ion and spatial distribution of prototypical bacteria with costained nucleoids and membranes (E. coli
295 onstrate dynamic clustering of twitcher-type bacteria with polydomains of local alignment that exhibi
296 ration of the outer surface of gram-negative bacteria with proteins tethered to the outer membrane th
297 or point-of-care diagnosis of drug resistant bacteria with visual signal output.
298 ST predicts the antibiotic susceptibility of bacteria within 15 min, which is a significant advantage
299            We model chemotactic transport of bacteria within a leaf tissue in response to photosynthe
300 potential vulnerability is the endosymbiotic bacteria Wolbachia-present in many filariae-which is vit

 
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