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1 ial cell-wide response to copper toxicity in Enterobacteria.
2 , clinically and biotechnologically relevant enterobacteria.
3 kinase PhoQ and is widely distributed among enterobacteria.
4 uence and positioning is highly conserved in enterobacteria.
5 mbrane and elongating outside the cell as in enterobacteria.
6 n of the atlas that is depleted in high-risk enterobacteria.
7 PS) to elicit antibodies cross-reactive with enterobacteria.
8 of unknown function in Salmonella and other enterobacteria.
9 of the emergence of carbapenemase-producing enterobacteria.
10 he anaerobic fermentation of glucose by many enterobacteria.
11 e T4aP structure, function and biogenesis in enterobacteria.
12 he nature of the interaction is conserved in enterobacteria.
13 riptional regulation of purine metabolism in enterobacteria.
14 it that this regulation also occurs in other enterobacteria.
15 ion against ACA in tmRNAs was seen mostly in enterobacteria.
16 nated by Rho factor, an essential protein in enterobacteria.
17 stribution in pathogenic and commensal human enterobacteria.
18 as a c-di-GMP receptor affecting motility in enterobacteria.
19 olutionary divergence from animal-pathogenic enterobacteria.
20 ci, staphylococci, lactobacilli, yeasts, and enterobacteria.
21 on on the coding strand has been observed in enterobacteria.
22 xposed to either pathogenic or nonpathogenic enterobacteria.
23 linked arthritides follows an infection with enterobacteria.
27 concatenation of the core set of TCSTs from enterobacteria and for individual TCST proteins from spe
29 that occur in a conserved genomic context in Enterobacteria and is essential in the infection process
30 ible for intracellular formate generation in enterobacteria and other microbes, interacts specificall
31 cquired antibiotic resistance genes found in enterobacteria and pseudomonads are part of small mobile
32 glutamine amidotransferase-QueC homologs in Enterobacteria and Pseudomonas phage, and distant homolo
33 e determinants, its carriage in a variety of enterobacteria, and its presence in both nosocomial and
34 nserved across its entire length in numerous Enterobacteria, and mutational analysis revealed that tw
36 otal anaerobes, aerobes, bifidobacteria, and enterobacteria, and to assay for beta-glucuronidase, nit
39 The core bacteria include Pseudomonas and enterobacteria, both are shared in the sand flies in the
40 as found to be dominated by Lactobacilli and Enterobacteria, both typically facultative anaerobes.
42 jugated antibiotic that specifically targets enterobacteria by exploiting active import through oligo
43 ys show that processing of the model Ag from enterobacteria by mast cells is similar in efficiency to
44 close relatives all infect a broad range of enterobacteria by recognizing a plasmid-encoded conjugal
47 h whole genome sequence information from 250 enterobacteria clones to characterize the dissemination
50 pportunistic infections with FimH-expressing enterobacteria could occur in a setting deprived of opso
51 Infections caused by carbapenemase-producing enterobacteria (CPE) are a major concern in clinical set
52 gmoidoscopy scores (SS) were associated with enterobacteria, desulfovibrios, type E Clostridium perfr
53 hey promote infection by the phytopathogenic enterobacteria Dickeya dadantii and Erwinia amylovora.
56 ly (OMP) were consistently identified in the Enterobacteria Escherichia coli, Enterobacter cloacae, E
58 Blochmannia pairs, plus Buchnera and related enterobacteria, estimates of sequence divergence at four
59 temperate double-stranded (ds) phages, like enterobacteria, exhibit significantly high relative abun
62 unctionally uncharacterized, suggesting that enterobacteria harbor a pool of evolutionarily young, de
63 r of carbapenemase-encoding plasmids between enterobacteria in the gut microbiota of individual patie
64 lactobacilli) and increase the abundance of enterobacteria including entropathogenic Escherichia col
65 essing occurs from a number of Gram-negative enterobacteria including Salmonella typhimurium and Esch
66 gen is an exopolysaccharide produced by many enterobacteria, including the majority of Escherichia co
67 a condition often associated with virulence, enterobacteria inhibit the ClpXP-dependent proteolysis o
68 toxins are PIN domain endonucleases that, in enterobacteria, inhibit translation by site-specific cle
70 eir biogenesis in Escherichia coli and other enterobacteria involves two machineries: Isc and Suf.
71 can bloom in the inflamed gut; expansion of enterobacteria is a hallmark of microbial imbalance know
75 he phage shock protein (Psp) system found in enterobacteria is induced in response to impaired inner
76 ssembly of CoA in Escherichia coli and other enterobacteria is well understood, except for the events
77 Since the alpha gal epitope is found on gut enterobacteria, it has been hypothesized that anti-gal a
78 operate on the chromosomal fis genes of the enterobacteria Klebsiella pneumoniae, Serratia marcescen
80 imited contribution to the noncore genome of enterobacteria, likely due to the limitations on the siz
81 s have elucidated aspects of Lpt function in enterobacteria, little is known about how this system op
82 ersification of Cu-resistance systems within enterobacteria, little research has focused on how this
84 relatively conserved, and suggest that these enterobacteria may have maintained their ancient core TC
89 ved in c-di-GMP synthesis and degradation in enterobacteria, only a handful of c-di-GMP receptors/eff
92 NAs, was recently detected in genomic DNA of Enterobacteria phage 9g and was proposed to protect phag
94 ate Tetrahymena thermophila, and the viruses Enterobacteria phage Rb49 and Bacteriophage Felix 01.
98 tructure analysis of the S10 leaders of five enterobacteria (Salmonella typhimurium, Citrobacter freu
100 a to cefiderocol killing, pyoverdine and the enterobacteria siderophore enterobactin displaced iron f
101 nt high levels of proteobacteria, especially enterobacteria species including E. coli, observed in cl
102 artii and E. rhapontici, as well as in other enterobacteria such as Escherichia coli, Salmonella ente
105 ere up to 20-fold less efficient in clearing enterobacteria than control WBB6F1 +/+ (+/+) mice or mas
108 m plays an essential role in the response of enterobacteria to the environment of their mammalian hos
110 or the rapid classification of Gram-negative Enterobacteria using on-slide solubilization and trypsin
111 a-Proteobacteria, for example, in genomes of Enterobacteria, Vibrio, and Halomonas species, and in ty
112 of S. typhimurium LT2 genes in eight related enterobacteria was determined using previously completed
113 ells have been shown to phagocytose and kill enterobacteria, we wished to determine whether they coul
115 cated in the repression state of AmpR in the enterobacteria, were also shown to play a structural rol
116 sadA; orthologous operons are only found in enterobacteria, whereas other TAAs are not typically ass
117 hE belongs to the flhBAE flagellar operon in Enterobacteria, whose first two members function in Type
118 on genomic comparisons between Eca and other enterobacteria, with particular emphasis on the differen
119 tained for its role in growth homeostasis of Enterobacteria within the gut environment, thereby allow