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  1. Photorhabdus are Gram negative bacteria that are pathogenic to insect larvae whilst also having a mutualistic interaction with nematodes from the family Heterorhabditis. Iron is an essential nutrient and bacteria...

    Authors: Robert J Watson, Peter Millichap, Susan A Joyce, Stuart Reynolds and David J Clarke
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:177
  2. Citrus Bacterial Canker (CBC) is a major, highly contagious disease of citrus plants present in many countries in Asia, Africa and America, but not in the Mediterranean area. There are three types of Citrus Ba...

    Authors: Luciano A Rigano, María R Marano, Atilio P Castagnaro, Alexandre Morais Do Amaral and Adrian A Vojnov
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:176
  3. Celiac Disease (CD) is an autoimmune disorder of the small intestine in which dietary gluten ingestion leads to a chronic enteropathy. Recently, scientific evidence suggested a potential role of gut microbiota...

    Authors: Serena Schippa, Valerio Iebba, Maria Barbato, Giovanni Di Nardo, Valentina Totino, Monica Proietti Checchi, Catia Longhi, Giulia Maiella, Salvatore Cucchiara and Maria Pia Conte
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:175
  4. The entomopathogenic fungi of the genus Beauveria are cosmopolitan with a variety of different insect hosts. The two most important species, B. bassiana and B. brongniartii, have already been used as biological c...

    Authors: Dimitri V Ghikas, Vassili N Kouvelis and Milton A Typas
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:174
  5. S. aureus is a coloniser and pathogen of humans and mammals. Whole genome sequences of 58 strains of S. aureus in the public domain and data from multi-strain microarrays were compared to assess variation in the ...

    Authors: Alex J McCarthy and Jodi A Lindsay
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:173
  6. The release of LPS by bacteria stimulates both immune and specific epithelial cell types to release inflammatory mediators. It is known that LPS induces the release of IL-8 by intestinal mucosal cells. Because...

    Authors: Tiziana Angrisano, Raffaela Pero, Silvia Peluso, Simona Keller, Silvana Sacchetti, Carmelo B Bruni, Lorenzo Chiariotti and Francesca Lembo
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:172
  7. Burkholderia pseudomallei is the causative agent of melioidosis where the highest reported incidence world wide is in the Northeast of Thailand, where saline soil and water are prevalent. Moreover, recent reports...

    Authors: Pornpan Pumirat, Jon Cuccui, Richard A Stabler, Joanne M Stevens, Veerachat Muangsombut, Ekapot Singsuksawat, Mark P Stevens, Brendan W Wren and Sunee Korbsrisate
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:171
  8. Bacterial leaf blight causes significant yield losses in rice crops throughout Asia and Africa. Although both the Asian and African strains of the pathogen, Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (Xoo), induce similar sym...

    Authors: Mauricio Soto-Suárez, Diana Bernal, Carolina González, Boris Szurek, Romain Guyot, Joe Tohme and Valérie Verdier
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:170
  9. Derived from our lignocellulosic conversion inhibitor-tolerant yeast, we generated an ethanol-tolerant strain Saccharomyces cerevisiae NRRL Y-50316 by enforced evolutionary adaptation. Using a newly developed rob...

    Authors: Menggen Ma and Lewis Z Liu
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:169
  10. Recent surveys of eukaryote 18S rDNA diversity in marine habitats have uncovered worldwide distribution of the heterotrophic eukaryote phylum Telonemia. Here we investigate the diversity and geographic distrib...

    Authors: Jon Bråte, Dag Klaveness, Tellef Rygh, Kjetill S Jakobsen and Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:168
  11. Quorum sensing is a communication system that regulates gene expression in response to population density and often regulates virulence determinants. Deletion of the luxR homologue vjbR highly attenuates intracel...

    Authors: Jenni N Weeks, Cristi L Galindo, Kenneth L Drake, Garry L Adams, Harold R Garner and Thomas A Ficht
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:167
  12. Salmonella enterica, a common food-borne bacterial pathogen, is believed to change its protein expression profile in the presence of different environmental stress such as that caused by the exposure to hydrogen ...

    Authors: Kihoon Kim, Edward Yang, Gia-Phong Vu, Hao Gong, Jing Su, Fenyong Liu and Sangwei Lu
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:166
  13. West Nile virus (WNV) causes viremia after invasion to the hosts by mosquito bite. Endothelial cells could play an important role in WNV spread from the blood stream into the central nervous system and periphe...

    Authors: Rie Hasebe, Tadaki Suzuki, Yoshinori Makino, Manabu Igarashi, Satoko Yamanouchi, Akihiko Maeda, Motohiro Horiuchi, Hirofumi Sawa and Takashi Kimura
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:165
  14. Fine tuning expression of genes is a prerequisite for the strictly human pathogen Neisseria meningitidis to survive hostile growth conditions and establish disease. Many bacterial species respond to stress by usi...

    Authors: Carla Th P Hopman, Dave Speijer, Arie van der Ende and Yvonne Pannekoek
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:164
  15. CJ9-gD is a novel dominant-negative recombinant herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1) that is completely replication-defective, cannot establish detectable latent infection in vivo, and expresses high levels of the...

    Authors: Richard Brans and Feng Yao
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:163
  16. Nontypeable Haemophilus influenzae colonizes and infects the airways of adults with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, the fourth most common cause of death worldwide.Thus, H. influenzae, an exclusively human...

    Authors: Jun Qu, Alan J Lesse, Aimee L Brauer, Jin Cao, Steven R Gill and Timothy F Murphy
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:162
  17. Escherichia coli strains are commonly found in the gut microflora of warm-blooded animals. These strains can be assigned to one of the four main phylogenetic groups, A, B1, B2 and D, which can be divided into sev...

    Authors: Camila Carlos, Mathias M Pires, Nancy C Stoppe, Elayse M Hachich, Maria IZ Sato, Tânia AT Gomes, Luiz A Amaral and Laura MM Ottoboni
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:161
  18. Fibronectin binding proteins A and B (FnBPA and FnBPB) mediate adhesion of S. aureus to fibrinogen, elastin and fibronectin. We previously identified seven different isotypes of FnBPA based on divergence in the f...

    Authors: Fiona M Burke, Niamh McCormack, Simonetta Rindi, Pietro Speziale and Timothy J Foster
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:160
  19. Staphylococcus aureus is a highly adaptable human pathogen and there is a constant search for effective antibiotics. Fosfomycin is a potent irreversible inhibitor of MurA, an enolpyruvyl transferase that uses pho...

    Authors: Marko Petek, Špela Baebler, Drago Kuzman, Ana Rotter, Zdravko Podlesek, Kristina Gruden, Maja Ravnikar and Uroš Urleb
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:159
  20. Genetic relationships among 81 strains of Y. enterocolitica biovar 1A isolated from clinical and non-clinical sources were discerned by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis (MLEE) and multilocus restriction typing (...

    Authors: Sarita Mallik and Jugsharan S Virdi
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:158
  21. Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. savastanoi is the causal agent of olive knot disease. The strains isolated from oleander and ash belong to the pathovars nerii and fraxini, respectively. When artificially inoculated, p...

    Authors: Stefania Tegli, Matteo Cerboneschi, Ilaria Marsili Libelli and Elena Santilli
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:156
  22. In recent years genome sequencing has been used to characterize new bacterial species, a method of analysis available as a result of improved methodology and reduced cost. Included in a constantly expanding li...

    Authors: Bradd J Haley, Christopher J Grim, Nur A Hasan, Seon-Young Choi, Jongsik Chun, Thomas S Brettin, David C Bruce, Jean F Challacombe, J Chris Detter, Cliff S Han, Anwar Huq and Rita R Colwell
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:154
  23. Integrative and conjugative elements (ICE) form a diverse group of DNA elements that are integrated in the chromosome of the bacterial host, but can occasionally excise and horizontally transfer to a new host ...

    Authors: Muriel Gaillard, Nicolas Pradervand, Marco Minoia, Vladimir Sentchilo, David R Johnson and Jan Roelof van der Meer
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:153
  24. The periodontal pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis is an obligate anaerobe that requires heme for growth. To understand its heme acquisition mechanism, we focused on a hemin-binding protein (HBP35 protein), posses...

    Authors: Mikio Shoji, Yasuko Shibata, Teruaki Shiroza, Hideharu Yukitake, Benjamin Peng, Yu-Yen Chen, Keiko Sato, Mariko Naito, Yoshimitsu Abiko, Eric C Reynolds and Koji Nakayama
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:152
  25. The Beijing lineage of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is causing concern due to its global distribution and its involvement in severe outbreaks. Studies focused on this lineage are mainly restricted to geographical s...

    Authors: M Alonso, N Alonso Rodriguez, C Garzelli, M Martínez Lirola, M Herranz, S Samper, MJ Ruiz Serrano, E Bouza and D García de Viedma
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:151
  26. Communities of microorganisms control the rates of key biogeochemical cycles, and are important for biotechnology, bioremediation, and industrial microbiological processes. For this reason, we constructed a mo...

    Authors: Lance D Miller, Jennifer J Mosher, Amudhan Venkateswaran, Zamin K Yang, Anthony V Palumbo, Tommy J Phelps, Mircea Podar, Christopher W Schadt and Martin Keller
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:149
  27. E. coli cells are rich in thiamine, most of it in the form of the cofactor thiamine diphosphate (ThDP). Free ThDP is the precursor for two triphosphorylated derivatives, thiamine triphosphate (ThTP) and the newly...

    Authors: Tiziana Gigliobianco, Bernard Lakaye, Pierre Wins, Benaïssa El Moualij, Willy Zorzi and Lucien Bettendorff
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:148
  28. The effects of acetic acid, a common food preservative, on the bacteriophage-encoded enterotoxin A (SEA) expression and production in Staphylococcus aureus was investigated in pH-controlled batch cultures carried...

    Authors: Nina Wallin-Carlquist, Rong Cao, Dóra Márta, Ayla Sant'Ana da Silva, Jenny Schelin and Peter Rådström
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:147
  29. Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (PRRS) has now been widely recognized as an economically important disease. The objective of this study was to compare the molecular and biological characteristics...

    Authors: Chengmin Wang, Bin Wu, Said Amer, Jing Luo, Hongmei Zhang, Yunhai Guo, Guoying Dong, Baohua Zhao and Hongxuan He
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:146
  30. Poorly understood but highly diverse microbial communities exist within anoxic and oxygen-depleted marine sediments. These communities often harbour single-celled eukaryotes that form symbiotic associations wi...

    Authors: Susana A Breglia, Naoji Yubuki, Mona Hoppenrath and Brian S Leander
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:145
  31. NAD-glycohydrolase (NADase) secreted by M-1 group A streptococcal (GAS) isolates are suspected as one of the virulence factors to cause severe invasive disease including streptococcal toxic shock-like syndrome...

    Authors: Ichiro Tatsuno, Masanori Isaka, Masaaki Minami and Tadao Hasegawa
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:144
  32. To evaluate the antibiogram and antibiotic resistance genes of some Vibrio strains isolated from wastewater final effluents in a rural community of South Africa. V. vulnificus (18), V. metschnikovii (3), V. fluvi...

    Authors: Anthony I Okoh and Etinosa O Igbinosa
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:143
  33. Whiteflies are cosmopolitan phloem-feeding pests that cause serious damage to many crops worldwide due to direct feeding and vectoring of many plant viruses. The sweetpotato whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) an...

    Authors: Marisa Skaljac, Katja Zanic, Smiljana Goreta Ban, Svetlana Kontsedalov and Murad Ghanim
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:142
  34. Photorhabdus are Gram-negative nematode-symbiotic and insect-pathogenic bacteria. The species Photorhabdus asymbiotica is able to infect humans as well as insects. We investigated the secreted proteome of a clini...

    Authors: Robert T Jones, Maria Sanchez-Contreras, Isabella Vlisidou, Matthew R Amos, Guowei Yang, Xavier Muñoz-Berbel, Abhishek Upadhyay, Ursula J Potter, Susan A Joyce, Todd A Ciche, A Toby A Jenkins, Stefan Bagby, Richard H ffrench-Constant and Nicholas R Waterfield
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:141
  35. Bacterial bodies (colonies) can develop complex patterns of color and structure. These patterns may arise as a result of both colony-autonomous developmental and regulatory processes (self-patterning) and envi...

    Authors: Jaroslav J Čepl, Irena Pátková, Anna Blahůšková, Fatima Cvrčková and Anton Markoš
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:139
  36. The assimilation of nitrogen is an essential process in all prokaryotes, yet a relatively limited amount of information is available on nitrogen metabolism in the mycobacteria. The physiological role and patho...

    Authors: Catriona J Harper, Don Hayward, Martin Kidd, Ian Wiid and Paul van Helden
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:138
  37. While most gamma proteobacteria have a single circular chromosome, Vibrionales have two circular chromosomes. Horizontal gene transfer is common among Vibrios, and in light of this genetic mobility, it is an open...

    Authors: Benjamin C Kirkup Jr, LeeAnn Chang, Sarah Chang, Dirk Gevers and Martin F Polz
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:137
  38. Telomeres are specialized structures at the end of chromosomes essential for maintaining genome stability and cell viability. The importance of telomeric proteins for telomere maintenance has increased our int...

    Authors: Marcelo S da Silva, Arina M Perez, Rita de Cássia V da Silveira, Camila E de Moraes, Jair L Siqueira-Neto, Lucio H Freitas-Junior and Maria Isabel N Cano
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:136
  39. Zymomonas mobilis produces near theoretical yields of ethanol and recombinant strains are candidate industrial microorganisms. To date, few studies have examined its responses to various stresses at the gene leve...

    Authors: Shihui Yang, Dale A Pelletier, Tse-Yuan S Lu and Steven D Brown
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:135
  40. Porphyromonas gingivalis is a major etiological agent of chronic periodontitis. The aim of this study was to examine the species specificity, surface exposure, protein expression, immunogenicity, and participatio...

    Authors: Teresa Olczak, Halina Wójtowicz, Justyna Ciuraszkiewicz and Mariusz Olczak
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:134
  41. Membrane- and membrane-associated proteins are important for the pathogenicity of bacteria. We have analysed the content of these proteins in virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Rv using Triton X-114 detergent...

    Authors: Hiwa Målen, Sharad Pathak, Tina Søfteland, Gustavo A de Souza and Harald G Wiker
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:132
  42. The RNA interference (RNAi) pathway acts as an innate antiviral immune response in Aedes aegypti, modulating arbovirus infection of mosquitoes. Sindbis virus (SINV; family: Togaviridae, genus: Alphavirus) is an a...

    Authors: Cynthia CH Khoo, Joseph Piper, Irma Sanchez-Vargas, Ken E Olson and Alexander WE Franz
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:130
  43. The gut comprises an essential barrier that protects both invertebrate and vertebrate animals from invasion by microorganisms. Disruption of the balanced relationship between indigenous gut microbiota and thei...

    Authors: Nichole A Broderick, Kenneth F Raffa and Jo Handelsman
    Citation: BMC Microbiology 2010 10:129

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