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1 ation of important metabolic determinants of bacterial physiology.
2 vation may have deleterious consequences for bacterial physiology.
3 hput sequencing and molecular measurement of bacterial physiology.
4 arch for the specific function(s) of LeuO in bacterial physiology.
5 at our screen is uncovering novel aspects of bacterial physiology.
6 lycosylation to several important aspects of bacterial physiology.
7 hould enable insights into the regulation of bacterial physiology.
8 , also plays an important role in regulating bacterial physiology.
9 g of the importance of tRNA modifications in bacterial physiology.
10 ay important and underappreciated role(s) in bacterial physiology.
11 growth rate is well accepted in the field of bacterial physiology.
12 m to elucidate the role of these proteins in bacterial physiology.
13 DPr may play a previously overlooked role in bacterial physiology.
14 phyla, underscoring their broad relevance in bacterial physiology.
15 ," which provides a new aspect to understand bacterial physiology.
16 stems are mediators of diverse activities in bacterial physiology.
17 gh many mechanisms, including alterations to bacterial physiology.
18 f the most precisely controlled processes in bacterial physiology.
19 tion), and some have been reported to affect bacterial physiology.
20 This is an additional role for c-di-GMP in bacterial physiology.
21 essenger c-di-AMP plays an important role in bacterial physiology.
22 aling molecules that control many aspects of bacterial physiology.
23 but little is known regarding their role in bacterial physiology.
24 s the way for novel approaches to manipulate bacterial physiology.
25 derstanding sRNA silencing in the context of bacterial physiology.
26 dered undesirable in quantitative studies of bacterial physiology.
27 ications for bacterial membrane function and bacterial physiology.
28 d other fundamental aspects of gram-positive bacterial physiology.
29 instrumental in shaping our understanding of bacterial physiology.
30 eption to c-di-GMP turnover in regulation of bacterial physiology.
31 ng channels has changed our understanding of bacterial physiology.
32 n about the impact of protein acetylation on bacterial physiology.
33 hypothesis that acetylation broadly impacts bacterial physiology.
34 it is a peptidase with a unique function in bacterial physiology.
35 te, a molecule that plays important roles in bacterial physiology.
36 analysis provides valuable information about bacterial physiology.
37 rates has contributed to understanding basic bacterial physiology.
38 the inner membrane is an important aspect of bacterial physiology.
39 e two phenomena are underpinned by different bacterial physiologies.
41 hich this essential second messenger impacts bacterial physiology and adaptation to changing environm
47 chanistic insight into an important facet of bacterial physiology and establish flavinylation as a fu
49 implications for both basic understanding of bacterial physiology and for the classification of bacte
53 differentially express proteins involved in bacterial physiology and host-pathogen interactions, spe
54 sing and quorum sensing significantly affect bacterial physiology and host-pathogen interactions.
56 e mechanisms of how host metabolites promote bacterial physiology and immune evasion are often unclea
59 important but yet-uncharacterized aspects of bacterial physiology and may provide targets for anti-mi
60 mental systems that incorporate knowledge of bacterial physiology and metabolism with insights from b
61 suggesting that they play important roles in bacterial physiology and modulation of the metazoan host
63 nificance of RNA thermometers in controlling bacterial physiology and pathogenesis is becoming increa
65 onine (Thr) and tyrosine (Tyr) is central to bacterial physiology and pathogenesis, and that the corr
71 se processes provides critical insights into bacterial physiology and potential new targets for antib
72 ction of CRISPR-Cas systems as regulators of bacterial physiology and provide a framework with which
73 highlight the intimate relationship between bacterial physiology and resistance to innate immune kil
74 These studies have provided new insight into bacterial physiology and revealed predicted functions fo
77 as nitrogen sources, using a combination of bacterial physiology and stable isotope tracing coupled
78 novel link between how an antibiotic affects bacterial physiology and subsequent immune system engage
79 tants revealed that the beneficial effect on bacterial physiology and survival was mediated by the ab
81 e novel findings impact our understanding of bacterial physiology and the need to continue to explore
82 idence for their role in multiple aspects of bacterial physiology and their interaction with vertebra
83 for studying the role of essential genes in bacterial physiology and virulence in both genetically t
85 ein membrane complexes play crucial roles in bacterial physiology and virulence, the mechanisms gover
88 these systems may have broader functions in bacterial physiology, and it is unknown if they regulate
89 central roles in many fundamental aspects of bacterial physiology, and they are important determinant
90 nisms, to reveal novel phenotypes related to bacterial physiology, and to probe the role of bacterial
91 on cell envelope biogenesis and maintenance, bacterial physiology, antibiotic resistance and virulenc
93 way in C. elegans and interventions altering bacterial physiology as increasing both lifespan and hea
94 logies have transformed our understanding of bacterial physiology as well as the contribution of the
95 e broad implications to our understanding of bacterial physiology, as the glassy behavior of the cyto
96 teria to define broadly the effects of NO on bacterial physiology, as well as to identify the functio
97 of gene functions and conserved processes in bacterial physiology, as well as whole-cell models and t
98 rane protein (OMP) biogenesis is critical to bacterial physiology because the cellular envelope is vi
99 h relevant roles in different aspects of the bacterial physiology, besides antibiotic resistance.
100 e TA systems are involved not only in normal bacterial physiology but also in pathogenicity of bacter
102 uggest that PG may play an essential role in bacterial physiology by maintaining the anionic characte
103 ogy research, advancing the understanding of bacterial physiology by mimicking natural environments,
104 Cas, extending roles of sRNAs in controlling bacterial physiology by promoting CRISPR-Cas adaptation
105 nstrate how resistance-associated changes in bacterial physiology can mechanistically induce collater
106 in transferase ApbE plays essential roles in bacterial physiology, covalently incorporating FMN cofac
108 somally encoded toxin-antitoxin (TA) loci in bacterial physiology has been under debate, with the tox
109 al work in the 1940s, investigators studying bacterial physiology have largely (but not exclusively)
111 Despite the central role of division in bacterial physiology, how division proteins work togethe
112 interspecies signalling molecule to modulate bacterial physiology; however, it is not clear how the i
113 rones that appear to play important roles in bacterial physiology; however, it is not known how these
115 teract with NO is essential to understanding bacterial physiology in many habitats, including pathoge
116 ation and, more importantly, that control of bacterial physiology in response to the plant and surrou
118 verse molecular activities to interfere with bacterial physiology in various, yet ill-defined, biolog
119 t) reveals the influence of this prophage on bacterial physiology in vitro and during colonization of
122 hese regulators influence diverse aspects of bacterial physiology, including but not limited to host
123 they play key roles in important aspects of bacterial physiology, including genomic stability, forma
125 Potassium (K(+) ) plays a vital role in bacterial physiology, including regulation of cytoplasmi
130 n function, suggesting that novel aspects of bacterial physiology may play a part in biofilm formatio
131 ing the integration of three core aspects of bacterial physiology: metabolism, growth, and cell cycle
133 acid synthesis (FASII) is a vital aspect of bacterial physiology, not only for the formation of memb
134 ght has become a puzzling and novel issue in bacterial physiology, particularly among bacterial patho
135 bacterial genomes and play critical roles in bacterial physiology, pathogenicity, and antibiotic resi
136 chromosomal toxin-antitoxin (TA) modules in bacterial physiology remains enigmatic despite their abu
141 fascinating insights into the links between bacterial physiology, the expression of virulence genes,
142 se, we propose its acetylation may influence bacterial physiology through effects on gene expression.
143 ct nutrient availability and link individual bacterial physiology to macroscale collective behavior.
144 itions of natural habitats can interact with bacterial physiology to promote the evolution of coopera
145 ene-expression data indicate that agr adapts bacterial physiology to stationary growth and, furthermo
147 ion is thus crucial for our understanding of bacterial physiology under various stress conditions.
148 roteins and RNA riboswitches, which regulate bacterial physiology upon binding to nucleotides, have b
149 In the present work the role of MazF in bacterial physiology was studied by using an inactive, a
150 ating a long-standing conceptual question in bacterial physiology, we examine why DnaA, the bacterial
151 interrogate the impact of cell morphology on bacterial physiology, we used fluorescence-activated cel
152 e-encoded auxiliary functions that influence bacterial physiology, which revealed an enrichment of ge
153 e current understanding of cNP signalling in bacterial physiology with a focus on our understanding o
155 hown to play an increasingly diverse role in bacterial physiology, yet much remains to be learned abo