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1 growth on glucose, lactose, and maltose in a chemostat.
2 s extinction of the bacterial culture in the chemostat.
3 rameters of plasmid-bearing cells growing in chemostat.
4  under hemin excess conditions (pH 7.0) in a chemostat.
5 f bacterial growth parameters in a simulated chemostat.
6 ypes (differing in viral resistance) in each chemostat.
7 f Escherichia coli growing in a microfluidic chemostat.
8 r mutant that outgrew its predecessor in the chemostat.
9 present in some initial concentration in the chemostat.
10 the transcriptome of NO-exposed E. coli in a chemostat.
11 500 generations of growth in glucose-limited chemostats.
12  experimental evolution in glutamine-limited chemostats.
13 tained in nutrient-limiting conditions using chemostats.
14 s, ARS, or all elements in glutamine-limited chemostats.
15 eneration for GAP1 CNVs in glutamine-limited chemostats.
16  mixed and continually fed into 10 identical chemostats.
17 e in monocultures evolving in lysine-limited chemostats.
18 ted against experimental data obtained using chemostats.
19 ive and methanogenic coculture conditions in chemostats.
20 nchronized cultures growing exponentially in chemostats.
21                                 Microfluidic chemostats allowed observation of intrinsic cell dynamic
22 r community consequences; coevolution in the chemostat altered the sensitivity of Synechoccocus to a
23 retic analysis and protein identification in chemostat and continuous-culture biofilm-grown populatio
24  this hypothesis, we grew diverse strains in chemostat and measured DNA replication and oxygen consum
25 s many environments, bridges the gap between chemostat and serial dilution systems.
26 smid pBR322 depended on the dilution rate in chemostat and was higher at low dilutions; (ii) high lev
27 d on Prochlorococcus MED4 grown in P-limited chemostats and batch cultures.
28 mework to model microbial transformations in chemostats and retentostats under transient or quasi-ste
29  a number of steady and unsteady continuous (chemostat) and batch culture laboratory experiments.
30 igh and low growth rates in a carbon-limited chemostat, and transcriptomic analysis was performed to
31      Blinded specimen sets from human stool, chemostats, and artificial microbial communities were se
32 er hour, were obtained from cellobiose-grown chemostats, and it was shown that one ATP is required pe
33  chemostat, indicating that the cells in the chemostat are "poor, not starving." Similar comparisons
34 GBS type V, an emergent serotype, grown in a chemostat at a cell mass-doubling time (t(d)) of 1.8 h w
35                  Each species was grown in a chemostat at two different growth rates.
36 ith noise measurements of cells growing in a chemostat at well-defined growth rates, suggests that ce
37 )) to epsilon(C) = -4.1 +/- 0.2 per mille in chemostats at 90 mug L(-1).
38 calis, we used microtiter plate assays and a chemostat-based biofilm fermentor assay to examine biofi
39 fically, in this paper, we develop a simple, chemostat-based model illustrating how a process analogo
40                                    Utilizing chemostat-based resource-competition models, we exhibit
41                               Therefore, the chemostat bears the imprint of earlier, simultaneous sti
42        In this scenario, simulations require chemostats capable of preserving the chemical concentrat
43  general and stress-specific responses under chemostat conditions in which specific growth rate-depen
44 sion is derepressed in all nitrogen-limiting chemostat conditions regardless of nitrogen source, and
45 raints of constant total population size and chemostat conditions.
46      Although in both cases the cells in the chemostat consumed most of the glucose, in neither case
47 s growing at steady state in glucose-limited chemostats corresponds most closely with the state of ce
48  low glucose concentrations under continuous chemostat cultivation with the aim to identify novel fac
49 s of S. aureus growing at different rates in chemostat culture ( approximately 6 h, 1 day and 2 week
50 s to a sudden drop in oxygen availability in chemostat culture and studied the transcriptional respon
51 ical manipulation of S. mutans in continuous chemostat culture demonstrated that steadystate levels o
52                         E. coli was grown in chemostat culture so that cellular metabolism could be h
53 vels of either nitrate or nitrite, anaerobic chemostat culture techniques were employed using nrfA-la
54 igh levels of nitrate, nitrite, and formate, chemostat culture techniques were employed with fdnG-lac
55    The stochastic IBM model fails the steady chemostat culture test, because it produces excessive nu
56 tion in batch culture to P-limited growth in chemostat culture.
57 f environmental fitness than either batch or chemostat culture.
58                                    Utilizing chemostat-cultured human fecal bacteria, we identified t
59  microbiota were further validated using gut chemostat cultures and microbiota transfer into germ-fre
60 ply to excess gaseous IC supply, N. europaea chemostat cultures demonstrated an acclimation period th
61 n of a modest oxidative stress response, the chemostat cultures did not exhibit the massive environme
62                                              Chemostat cultures enabled a study of AI-2 regulation th
63  data from genes in Saccharomyces cerevisiae chemostat cultures exhibiting energy metabolic oscillati
64                             Glycerol-limited chemostat cultures in defined medium of Escherichia coli
65                                   Four of 13 chemostat cultures monomorphic for the lac operon retain
66 ns by means of (13)C-labeling experiments in chemostat cultures of a wild-type strain, DeltacreB and
67 lization of fumarate as an electron donor in chemostat cultures of Geobacter sulfurreducens, despite
68     A novel aspect of our work is the use of chemostat cultures of M. tuberculosis which allowed us t
69 showed that indene oxidation in steady state chemostat cultures proceeds primarily through a monooxyg
70         We used steady-state oxic and anoxic chemostat cultures to demonstrate that the switch from a
71  communication, was studied in E. coli W3110 chemostat cultures using a Vibrio harveyi AI-2 reporter
72  to PQH2 extraction, cells from steady-state chemostat cultures were exposed to a wide range of physi
73 embly in Escherichia coli using steady-state chemostat cultures where we could precisely control the
74 two different parameters in nutrient-limited chemostat cultures, biomass concentration and the ratio
75  +/- 0.06 was calculated for cellulose-grown chemostat cultures, corresponding to n = 4.20 +/- 0.46.
76               Using minimal-medium batch and chemostat cultures, we comprehensively characterized spe
77 ate using carbon (serine)-limited continuous chemostat cultures.
78 imental data obtained from highly controlled chemostat cultures.
79 myces cerevisiae (yeast) in nitrogen-limited chemostat cultures.
80 diverse nutrients in batch and steady-state (chemostat) cultures of S. cerevisiae.
81 lucose limitation in batch and steady-state (chemostat) cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae by follo
82  from epsilon(C) = -1.0 +/- 0.5 per mille in chemostats (D = 0.090 h(-1), 88 mg L(-1)) and epsilon(C)
83 athione (GSNO) in both aerobic and anaerobic chemostats, demonstrated the expression of nitric oxide
84  phenotypes such as competitive fitness in a chemostat, DNA repair proficiency, and synthetic genetic
85 nclude the toxin/antitoxin interactions in a chemostat does not alter the qualitative results that su
86 l in which the resource exhibits logistic or chemostat dynamics and consumers have saturating (Type I
87 a defined selection is continuous culturing: chemostats enable the study of adaptive evolution in con
88 replicate experiments are adaptations to the chemostat environment and are not specific to one or the
89 ontrol amensal bacteriocin interactions in a chemostat environment.
90 meters measured in a range of community-like chemostat environments, prediction quantitatively agreed
91 robes growing on mixtures of substrates in a chemostat exhibit different substrate utilization patter
92 e the practicality of the code by modeling a chemostat experiment of atrazine degradation at low dilu
93                     We conducted a long-term chemostat experiment where the marine cyanobacterium Syn
94                    In a 6-mo-long replicated chemostat experiment, Synechococcus sp. WH7803 and the v
95    We first compare our model to a classical chemostat experiment, validating our proposed dynamics a
96                                              Chemostat experiments showed a metabolic shift induced i
97               Here, we use phosphate-limited chemostat experiments to show that acidification enhance
98              Isotope analysis of atrazine in chemostat experiments with whole cells revealed a drasti
99  unique deletions among 42 evolvants from 23 chemostat experiments.
100                                           In chemostats, fatty acids from glycerol-respiring cells we
101 ubstrate transport, mol ATP/mol hexose) from chemostats fed beta-glucans with degree of polymerizatio
102 gastrointestinal model comprising sequential chemostat fermentation steps that simulate digestive con
103                                       During chemostat fermentation that simulates colonic digestion,
104 hocyanins were detected in low amounts after chemostat fermentation.
105  effect of generation time (as controlled by chemostat flow rate) and temporal variability in nutrien
106  competition experiments in nutrient-limited chemostats followed by high-throughput sequencing of str
107 iocatalytic systems comprising the uses of a chemostat for strain improvement and radioisotopic trace
108 continuous aerobic growth in glucose-limited chemostats for more than 250 generations.
109                               Competition in chemostats for two substitutable resources, methylgalact
110 e-controlled cultures using nitrogen-limited chemostats, gene expression programs are strikingly simi
111 tate cultures of Saccharomyces cerevisiae in chemostats growing on limiting galactose to two differen
112 yield analysis and growth rates derived from chemostat-grown cells (under three conditions).
113                                              Chemostat-grown cells, subjected to increasing carbon st
114   The intracellular concentration of DMSP in chemostat-grown S. pomeroyi DSS-3 was 70 mM.
115 es to peroxynitrite under tightly controlled chemostat growth conditions.
116      First, using recently published data on chemostat growth of Saccharomyces cerevisae under differ
117                     Batch kinetic tests with chemostat harvested cells showed the maximum rate (k(max
118 aminant degradation by suspended bacteria in chemostats has shown that isotope fractionation decrease
119 sentially the same pattern was found between chemostats having a fivefold difference in steady-state
120 g prolonged culturing in L-glutamine-limited chemostats in a manner analogous to the selection of onc
121 were cultivated under high-DIC conditions in chemostats in growth medium with low concentrations of D
122          Strains isolated from three of four chemostats in which the lac polymorphism was preserved h
123 ted in batch cultures is not observed in the chemostat, indicating that the cells in the chemostat ar
124                                          Two chemostats inoculated with the Point Mugu culture, which
125             When the growth of bacteria in a chemostat is controlled by limiting the supply of a sing
126 ime, followed by a time gap during which the chemostat is not stimulated at all, and if the chemostat
127                                       When a chemostat is perturbed from its steady state, it display
128                         We show that, if the chemostat is stimulated by both growth factors for a cer
129 emostat is not stimulated at all, and if the chemostat is then stimulated again by only one of the gr
130 he biomolecular level, these algae inhabit a chemostat-like environment and is consistent with the ne
131 enrichment, providing evidence that SDB is a chemostat-like environment where circulation, temperatur
132  batch, the serial dilution dynamics mimic a chemostat-like steady state.
133                                            A chemostat limited by a single growth-limiting substrate
134                                           In chemostat-maintained perpetual cultures, the proportion
135 e and the biofilm community in mixed-culture chemostat MFCs.
136      We then remeasured strain phenotypes in chemostats mimicking the metabolite-limited community en
137 een the transcriptomic profile of BCG in the chemostat model and the response of M. tuberculosis to g
138 of M. tuberculosis and also the value of the chemostat model for deconstructing components of the in
139 ycobacterium tuberculosis in vivo, we used a chemostat model to study a single aspect of the organism
140 nt taxa were further maintained ex vivo in a chemostat model.
141 models: a standard Wright-Fisher model and a chemostat model.
142 rsus extinction only under certain ranges of chemostat operating parameters.
143 he morbidostat can additionally be used as a chemostat or a turbidostat.
144 me-course experiments that were performed in chemostats or batch cultures under a spectrum of environ
145 ith spent medium supernatants from batch and chemostat planktonic and biofilms generated in continual
146                                  The control chemostat (PM-5L, no sulfate), achieved pseudo-steady-st
147  Sulfate (1 mM) was introduced to the second chemostat, PM-2L.
148 mum nitrification rates, consistent with our chemostat results.
149 roline, to cells growing in nitrogen-limited chemostats results in rapid, dose-dependent repression o
150 on the flow rate and feed concentration, the chemostat settles into a steady state or executes sustai
151 tograms in RGB channels were extracted using Chemostat software.
152                 Results are presented from a chemostat study where the reductive dehalogenation of PC
153 level of GAP1 expression in nitrogen-limited chemostats suggests that the frequency of GAP1(circle) a
154 (gas phase, 200 ml of 5% CO2 in air x min-1) chemostat system were then investigated.
155 stems of protists in continuous experimental chemostat systems and corresponding continuous-time mode
156 lists on each galactoside were isolated from chemostats that maintained the fhuA polymorphism, whethe
157                            In the other five chemostats the fhuA polymorphism, and consequently the l
158                          In four out of nine chemostats the lac polymorphism persisted for 400-600 ge
159                                Extending the chemostat theory to include serial-dilution cultures, we
160 fects a lake microbial community by exposing chemostats to a tau gradient spanning seven orders of ma
161 ) mutant was cultured in an NH(4)(+)-limited chemostat, two sequential spontaneous mutations occurred
162 o fully aerobic metabolism of glucose in the chemostat under conditions of glucose scarcity, homeosta
163 cultivation of Arthrobacter aurescens TC1 in chemostat under four different dilution rates leading to
164                     Moreover, GBS grown in a chemostat under highly invasive conditions (t(d) of 1.8
165 Desulfovibrio alaskensis strain G20 grown in chemostats under respiratory and syntrophic conditions w
166 tinuous oxygen depletion were performed in a chemostat using nitrate as the terminal electron accepto
167 studied at four levels of iron limitation in chemostats using physiological and proteomic analyses.
168 of this model to experimental studies in the chemostat, using the model organisms Escherichia coli an
169                 Using growth adaptation in a chemostat, we increased n-butanol tolerance to 15 g/L.
170 ng at different steady-state growth rates in chemostats were subjected to a short heat pulse.
171                                              Chemostats were used to adapt cells to different growth
172                                  Most of the chemostats where the fhuA polymorphism was lost also con
173 iption factors during steady-state growth in chemostats, which facilitated distinction of direct from
174 creased when T. paralvinallae was grown in a chemostat with 65 microM of added H2(aq) .
175                                        Using chemostat with cell retention (CCR) of Pseudomonas putid
176 rlo simulations of populations evolving in a chemostat with fixed washout rate and inflow resource de
177 ained in growing Escherichia coli 23716 in a chemostat with glucose as a limiting nutrient.
178 toxin/antitoxin hypothesis for bacteria in a chemostat with results incorporating the senescence hypo
179 pirical applications: (1) algal species in a chemostat with variable temperature, showing that the st
180  In equable environments (modeled here using chemostats with constant inputs of nutrients and sensiti
181                          Cells were grown in chemostats with glucose, rate limiting or in excess, or
182 methanol or ethanol, during anoxic growth in chemostats with nitrate as the electron acceptor.
183                    In variable environments (chemostats with seasonal inputs), bacteriophage with hig
184 hesis from nutrient signaling by growing, in chemostats, yeast auxotrophs for histidine, lysine, or u

 
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