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    Updated: 2012-11-30 14:32:04
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  • Biowake offer savings of up to 60% on top brand compatible 384 robotic tips at the lowest costs – guaranteed.

    Updated: 2012-11-29 10:57:01
    www.biowake.com/robotic tips 22 november 2012 Biowake offer savings of up to 60% on top brand compatible 384 robotic tips at the lowest costs – guaranteed. ‘We offer a full range of 384 robotic tips which are 100% compatible with major automation platforms such as the Agilent/Velocity 11, Beckman and Perkin Elmer’ explained CEO of Biowake, Erdal Demir. Find our complete listing of robotic tips here! All tips are DNase & RNase, endotoxin and pyrogen fr...

  • Biowake are proud to announce their membership to The Federation of Technology Branches (FHI).

    Updated: 2012-11-29 10:52:23
    www.biowake.com About FHI FHI is the umbrella organisation for all the companies in the Netherlands offering and utilising technology in industry and the healthcare sector. The FHI has divided these companies into four branches: Industrial Electronics Industrial Automation Laboratory Technology Medical Technology Within the FHI there are a number of other bodies that collaborate with the four branches. The Development Club (the Association of Independent Product Development...

  • Wake up to a High 5

    Updated: 2012-11-29 10:50:16
    28th August 2012 Biowake BV (Arnhem, The Netherlands) will be launched as a new company on 5th September 2012! Biowake will feature at ELRIG’s (European Laboratory Robotics Interest Group) Innovation Zone during Drug Discovery 2012 meeting, to be held at Manchester Central, UK. ‘Biowake represents a new dawn in affordable automation’ commented CEO of Biowake, Erdal Demir. ‘We have developed a unique ‘High 5!’ philosophy where customers can expect High Qu...

  • Wake up to a new dawn in lab affordable automation

    Updated: 2012-11-29 10:46:32
    Biowake represents a new dawn in affordable laboratory automation. Our company was formed to address the need of scientists who are under increasing pressure to deliver high quality results, but with significantly reduced budgets. By supplying direct from the manufacturer Biowake is able to offer significant annual savings in your laboratory’s running costs. We supply to a diverse customer based including universities, hospitals, biobanks, pharmacists, biotech companies, plant and see...

  • Octupole Fiber Coil Winding Station/Automatic Fiber Coil Octupole Winding Station

    Updated: 2012-11-29 00:44:43
    Model No:ACWS-200B ACWS-200B fiber coil winding station is a newly-released machine which can wind the fiber coil for FOGs in the method of CW straight or any other ways like Octupole winding,Dipole Winding and etc. Its fiber coil outer diameter is ≤200mm, and its fiber coating diameter is ≤0.5mm, total fiber winding length is ≤3KM Features of Octupole Fiber Coil Winding Station: 1.Manual operation should be necessary for installation the fiber transition spool...

  • Quadrupolar Fiber Coil Winding Station/ACWS-230D Automated Coil Winding Station

    Updated: 2012-11-29 00:43:03
    Introductions of Quadrupolar Fiber Coil Winding Station: A comprehensive fully automatic winding station is required to precisely wind optical fiber to manufacture IFOG coils for tactical & strategic grades .In order to improve this working yield, ACWS-230D is developed which winding machine and unwinding machine is separate. The machine is for making coil outer diameter ≤200mm and fiber coating diameter ≤0.5mm, and the total fiber winding length is ≤5km. The fiber coil is w...

  • The increased incidence of Mycoplasma pneumoniae in France in 2011 was polyclonal mainly involving M. pneumoniae type 1 strains

    Updated: 2012-11-28 18:31:51
    . Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Infectious Disease Microbiology Clinical Microbiology and Infection Accepted Articles Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles Most Accessed GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL Society Information News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES Editor's Choice Wiley Job Network Research Note

  • Requirements for eIF4A and eIF2 during translation of Sindbis virus subgenomic mRNA in vertebrate and invertebrate host cells

    Updated: 2012-11-28 18:31:33
    Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Microbiology Virology Cellular Microbiology Accepted Articles Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES Faculty of 1000 Parasitology Virtual Special Issue Posters Virology Virtual Special Issue Wiley Job Network

  • ChIP‐seq and transcriptome analysis of the OmpR regulon of Salmonella enterica serovars Typhi and Typhimurium reveals accessory genes implicated in host colonisation

    Updated: 2012-11-28 18:30:36
    Abstract OmpR is a multifunctional DNA binding regulator with orthologues in many enteric bacteria, that exhibits classical regulator activity as well as nucleoid‐associated‐protein‐like characteristics. In the enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica, using chromatin immunoprecipitation of OmpR::FLAG and nucleotide sequencing, 43 putative OmpR‐binding sites were identified in S. enterica serovar Typhi, 22 of which were associated with OmpR‐regulated genes. Mutation of a sequence motif (TGTWACAW) that was associated with the putative OmpR‐binding sites abrogated binding of OmpR::6xhis to the tviA upstream region. A core set of 31 orthologous genes were found to exhibit OmpR‐dependent expression in both S. Typhi and S. Typhimurium. S. Typhimurium‐encoded orthologues of two diver...

  • Epidemiology and control of human schistosomiasis in Tanzania

    Updated: 2012-11-28 04:00:00
    Urogenital and intestinal schistosomiasis remains as a serious public health problem in Tanzania, almost 51.5% of the country population is infected. Several control efforts have been instituted in small and large scale and none of these have resulted in the control of the disease. Image: Fishermen along the southern shore of the Lake Victoria. (Source: Parasites and Vectors)

  • Correlation of intestinal microbiota with overweight and obesity in Kazakh school children

    Updated: 2012-11-28 04:00:00
    Conclusion: An association between reduced gut Bacteroidetes and Bact/Firm ratio with obesity in female Kazakh children was identified. Further studies are necessary to elucidate the mechanism behind these changes as well as the value of determining their presence for predicting obesity. (Source: BMC Microbiology - Latest articles)MedWorm Sponsor Message: Please support the Doctors In Chains campaign for the medics tortured and sentenced for up to 15 years in Bahrain. #FreeDoctors

  • A simple method of DNA isolation from jute (Corchorus olitorius) seed suitable for PCR‐based detection of the pathogen Macrophomina phaseolina (Tassi) Goid

    Updated: 2012-11-28 04:00:00
    Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Applied Microbiology Letters in Applied Microbiology Early View Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues Virtual Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL Society Information News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES Antimicrobials Virtual Issue Wiley Job Network Wine Fermentation

  • Shiga toxin–producing Escherichia coli from raw milk cheese in Egypt: prevalence, molecular characterization and survival to stress conditions

    Updated: 2012-11-28 04:00:00
    In this study, 124 raw milk cheese samples (64 Kareish and 60 Damietta cheese samples) were assayed for the presence of STEC using molecular detection of virulence markers such as Shiga toxins (stx1 and st×2) and intimin gene (eae) and by serotyping. By PCR, 14 E. coli strains showed the presence of the stx2 gene, either single or in association with the stx1, and were considered positive for STEC. The isolated non‐O157 STEC in this study (from serotypes O22:H8, O26:H11, O86:H21, O103:H2, O113:H21 and O146:H21) were inoculated in 10% skim milk and were compared to O157:H7 reference strain for their survival under different stress conditions (pH levels between 4·5 and 6·5 and salt concentrations between 1 and 6%) and 8 days of storage at refrigeration temperature (4°C). Strikingly, ...

  • Discrimination between s. Pneumoniae and s. Mitis based on sorting of their maldi mass spectra

    Updated: 2012-11-28 00:31:41
    Abstract Accurate species‐level identification of alpha‐hemolytic (viridans) streptococci (VGS) is very important for understanding of their pathogenicity and virulence. However, an extremely high level of the similarity between VGS within the mitis group (S.pneumoniae, S.mitis, S.oralis and S.pseudopneumoniae) often results in misidentification of these organisms. Earlier, matrix‐assisted laser desorption ionization time of flight mass spectrometry (MALDI‐TOF MS) has been suggested as a tool for the rapid identification of S. pneumoniae. But by using Biotyper 3.0 (Bruker) or Vitek MS (bioMérieux) databases, Streptococcus mitis/oralis species can be erroneously identified as S. pneumoniae. ClinProTools 2.1 software (Bruker Daltonics, Germany) was used for the discrimination of MAL...

  • A heart transplantation. 7. Microbiology and antibiotic chemotherapy

    Updated: 2012-11-27 17:35:24
    Burns MW (Source: The Aspergillus Website - articles)

  • Isolation and characterization of bacteriocin‐producing bacteria from the intestinal microbiota of elderly Irish subjects

    Updated: 2012-11-27 06:20:54
    ConclusionThese data suggest that bacteriocin production by intestinal isolates against our chosen targets under the screening conditions used was not frequent (0.08%).© 2012The Authors Journal of Applied Microbiology © 2012 The Society for Applied Microbiology (Source: Journal of Applied Microbiology)

  • Industrial waste based compost as a source of novel cellulolytic strains and enzymes

    Updated: 2012-11-27 06:20:36
    Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Microbiology Virology FEMS Microbiology Letters Accepted Articles Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues Virtual Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL Society Information News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES FEMS Most Cited Articles FEMS Most Read Articles Virtual Issue :

  • Assembly of the Marburg virus envelope

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Microbiology Virology Cellular Microbiology Accepted Articles Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES Faculty of 1000 Parasitology Virtual Special Issue Posters Virology Virtual Special Issue Wiley Job Network

  • Cytosolic herpes simplex virus capsids not only require binding inner tegument protein pUL36 but also pUL37 for active transport prior to secondary envelopment

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    Summary Since the inner tegument proteins pUL36 and pUL37 of alphaherpesviruses may contribute to efficient intracellular transport of viral particles, we investigated their role in cytosolic capsid motility during assembly of herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV1). As reported previously for pUL36, untagged pUL37 and UL37GFP bound to cytosolic capsids before these acquired outer tegument and envelope proteins. Capsids tagged with CheVP26 analyzed by live‐cell imaging were capable of directed long distance cytoplasmic transport during the assembly of wild‐type virions, while capsids of the HSV1‐ΔUL37 or HSV1‐ΔUL36 deletion mutants showed only random, undirected motion. The HSV1‐ΔUL37 phenotype was restored when UL37GFP had been overexpressed prior to infection. Quantitative immuno...

  • The cell biology of peritrichous flagella in Bacillus subtilis

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Molecular Microbiology Molecular Microbiology Accepted Articles Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES 3D Interactive Images Faculty of 1000 Prizes Awarded by Molecular Microbiology Virtual Special Issues

  • Evaluation of serovar‐independent ELISA antigens of Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae in pigs following vaccination or experimental challenge with respiratory pathogens and natural A. pleuropneumoniae serovar 1 challenge

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    ConclusionsThe 39‐kDa ELISA readily detects App exposure and infection, but is adversely affected by P. multocida infection. ApxIVA‐N‐based ELISAs can be used to evaluate the App status of commercial herds, but a proportion of infected and diseased animals are seronegative at 1 month after likely exposure to aerosol transmission of App from clinical cases. (Source: Australian Veterinary Journal)

  • Shift of CTX‐M genotypes has determined the increased prevalence of extended‐spectrum β‐lactamase‐producing Escherichia coli in south‐western Sweden

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Infectious Disease Microbiology Clinical Microbiology and Infection Early View Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles Most Accessed GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL Society Information News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES Editor's Choice Wiley Job Network Research Note Shift of

  • A retrospective study into the prevalence of HSV1&2 in female patients tested for CT/GC using vaginal swabs

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    The purpose of this study is to investigate the prevalence of herpes simplex virus (HSV) 1&2 in women screened for Chlamydia trachomatis and/or Neisseria gonorrhoea (CT/GC) infections. A total of 800 vaginal swabs were tested in a dual centre investigation, to evaluate the HSV 1&2 prevalence in this population. The average age of this population was 29.8 ± 9.2, ranging between 14 to 66 years old and a median of 28 years. The highest prevalence of HSV 1 or 2 was observed in the youngest age groups: teenagers and twenties with 5.26% and 4.31%, respectively. © 2012 The Authors Clinical Microbiology and Infection © 2012 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases (Source: Clinical Microbiology and Infection)

  • The therapeutic potential of immune crosstalk in leishmaniasis

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    Abstract Veterans of infection, Leishmania parasites have been plaguing mammalian‐kind for centuries, racking up a morbidity toll seconded only by malaria as the most devastating protozoan parasitic disease in the world. Cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) is, by far, the most prevalent form of the disease with symptoms ranging from a single self‐healing lesion to chronic metastatic leishmaniasis (ML). In an increasingly immunocompromised population, complicated CL is becoming a more likely outcome, characterised by an allergic hyper‐reactivity and resulting in severely inflamed, destructive lesions that are often refractory to current treatment. This is perhaps because our aging arsenal of variably effective anti‐leishmanial drugs may be directly or indirectly immunomodulatory—shifting...

  • A nitric oxide‐releasing solution as a potential treatment for fungi associated with tinea pedis

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    ConclusionsThis in vitro research suggests that a single 20‐min exposure to NORS could potentially be used as an effective single‐dose treatment against fungi that are associated with tinea pedis in both mycelia and spore phase. Significance and Impact of the StudyThis study provides the background for developing a user‐friendly footbath treatment for Athlete's Foot that will kill both vegetative fungi and its spores. (Source: Journal of Applied Microbiology)

  • Use of tuf as a target for sequence-based identification of Gram-positive cocci of the genus Enterococcus, Streptococcus, coagulase-negative Staphylococcus, and Lactococcus

    Updated: 2012-11-27 04:00:00
    Conclusion: Based on the uniform amplification of the tuf gene from all samples and the ability to identify all isolates at both the genus and species levels, we conclude that the primer pair developed in this research provides a powerful tool for identifying these organisms in clinical laboratories where large blind samples are used. (Source: Annals of Clinical Microbiology and Antimicrobials)

  • Relationships between fatty acid composition and bile tolerance in lactobacillus isolates from plants and from non-plant materials

    Updated: 2012-11-27 01:58:52
    Canadian Journal of Microbiology, Volume 0, Issue 0, Page 1396-1404, e-First articles. (Source: Canadian Journal of Microbiology)

  • A comparison of enrichment and direct-plating methods for isolation of Listeria monocytogenes from surface water

    Updated: 2012-11-27 01:32:52
    Canadian Journal of Microbiology, Volume 0, Issue 0, Page 1-6, e-First articles. (Source: Canadian Journal of Microbiology)

  • Retracted: Focal adhesions could be cell – cell signaling complexes in Myxobacterial swarms

    Updated: 2012-11-26 04:00:00
    (Source: Molecular Microbiology)<div id="medworm"MedWorm Sponsor Message: Please support the Doctors In Chains campaign for the medics tortured and sentenced for up to 15 years in Bahrain. #FreeDoctors

  • Evaluation of protective immune responses induced by DNA vaccines encoding Toxoplasma gondii surface antigen 1 (SAG1) and 14-3-3 protein in BALB/c mice

    Updated: 2012-11-26 04:00:00
    The present findings suggests that T. gondii 14-3-3 protein can induce effective immune responses in BALB/c mice and was a novel DNA vaccine candidate against toxoplasmosis. The immune protective efficacy elicited by SAG1 gene was also demonstrated. Image: The life cycle of Toxoplasma gondii. (Source: Parasites and Vectors)

  • Impact of temperature, CO2 fixation and nitrate reduction on selenium reduction, by a paddy soil Clostridium strain

    Updated: 2012-11-26 04:00:00
    , , Skip to Main Content Home Help PUBLICATIONS BROWSE BY SUBJECT RESOURCES ABOUT US LOGIN Enter e-mail address Enter password REMEMBER ME NOT REGISTERED FORGOTTEN PASSWORD INSTITUTIONAL LOGIN Home Microbiology Virology Applied Microbiology Journal of Applied Microbiology Accepted Articles Abstract JOURNAL TOOLS Get New Content Alerts Get RSS feed Save to My Profile Get Sample Copy Recommend to Your Librarian JOURNAL MENU Journal Home FIND ISSUES Current Issue All Issues Virtual Issues FIND ARTICLES Early View Accepted Articles GET ACCESS Subscribe Renew FOR CONTRIBUTORS OnlineOpen Author Guidelines Submit an Article ABOUT THIS JOURNAL Society Information News Overview Editorial Board Permissions Advertise Contact SPECIAL FEATURES Virtual Issue on Biodefence Virtual Issue on Campylobacter

  • Denitrification‐derived nitric oxide modulates biofilm formation in Azospirillum brasilense

    Updated: 2012-11-26 04:00:00
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  • Factors involved in the colonization and survival of bifidobacteria in the gastrointestinal tract

    Updated: 2012-11-26 04:00:00
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  • GW professor to examine infections in HIV patients with federal grant

    Updated: 2012-11-26 04:00:00
    (George Washington University) Imtiaz A. Khan, M.D., professor of microbiology, immunology, and tropical medicine at the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, received a $1.6 million federal grant from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases to study the effects of microsporidia--opportunistic inter-cellular pathogens--that cause morbidity and mortality in HIV patients. (Source: EurekAlert! - Medicine and Health)

  • Clinical identification of bacteria in human chronic wound infections: culturing vs. 16S ribosomal DNA sequencing

    Updated: 2012-11-24 04:00:00
    Conclusion: Discordance between molecular and culture testing is often observed. However, culture-free 16S ribosomal DNA sequencing and its relative abundance score can provide clinicians with insight into which bacteria are most abundant in a sample and which are most likely to be detected by culture. (Source: BMC Infectious Diseases)

  • A few remarks on isolation, speciation and antibiogram of clinically relevant nondiphtheroidal corynebacteria (diphtheroids)

    Updated: 2012-11-24 04:00:00
    Rupali Dey, Kalidas Rit, Bipasa Chakraborty, Prasanta K MaitiIndian Journal of Medical Microbiology 2012 30(4):482-482 (Source: Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology)

  • A pilot study to determine genetic polymorphism in Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates in Central India

    Updated: 2012-11-24 04:00:00
    , , , , , Indian Journal of Medical Microbiology IAMM About us Subscription e-Alerts Feedback Login Home Ahead of Print Current Issue Archives Search Instructions Users : Online 34 Official Publication of Indian Association of Medical Microbiologists Search Similar in PUBMED Search Pubmed for Desikan P Chauhan DS Sharma P Panwalkar N Gautam S Katoch VM Search in Google Scholar for Desikan P Chauhan DS Sharma P Panwalkar N Gautam S Katoch VM Related articles Genetic polymorphism Mycobacterium tuberculosis spoligotyping Article in PDF 417 KB Citation Manager Access Statistics Reader Comments Email Alert Add to My List Registration required free Abstract Introduction Materials and Me . Results Discussion References Article Tables Article Access Statistics Viewed 59 Printed 5 Emailed 0 PDF

  • The corn influence on the adsorption levels of aflatoxin B1 and zearalenone by yeast cell wall

    Updated: 2012-11-23 04:00:00
    ConclusionsBoth YCW adsorbed ZEA in the presence of corn and also under simulated gastrointestinal pH conditions. These results suggest that the studied YCW are potential candidates for ZEA adsorption. Significance and Impact of the StudySeveral in vitro assays have informed the ability of different substrates including yeast walls to adsorb AFB1 and ZEA; none of them have evaluated their ability to adsorb AFB1 and ZEA in the presence of the corn. The matrix as corn can influence the adsorption phenomena of these mycotoxins.© 2012The Authors Journal of Applied Microbiology © 2012 The Society for Applied Microbiology (Source: Journal of Applied Microbiology)

  • Polyhydroxyalkanoate biosynthesis and simplified polymer recovery by a novel moderately halophilic bacterium isolated from hypersaline microbial mats

    Updated: 2012-11-22 23:21:13
    ConclusionsHalomonas sp. SK5 was able to synthesize P(3HB) homopolymer as well as P(3HB‐co‐3HV) copolymer from various carbon sources. Signficance and Impact of the studyThis is the first time a comprehensive study of both production and downstream processing is reported for Halomonas spp.© 2012The Authors Journal of Applied Microbiology © 2012 The Society for Applied Microbiology (Source: Journal of Applied Microbiology)MedWorm Sponsor Message: Please have a look at this new site driven by MedWorm: The Breast Cancer Daily

  • hplc principle

    Updated: 2012-11-08 20:39:00
    i want comlete principle of hplc briefly.

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