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Cultivation‐independent characterization of ‘ Candidatus Magnetobacterium bavaricum’ via ultrastructural, geochemical, ecological and metagenomic methods

Citation
Jogler et al. (2010). Environmental Microbiology 12 (9)
Names
Ca. Magnetobacterium bavaricum
Abstract
Summary ‘ Candidatus Magnetobacterium bavaricum’ is unusual among magnetotactic bacteria (MTB) in terms of cell size (8–10 µm long, 1.5–2 µm in diameter), cell architecture, magnetotactic behaviour and its distinct phylogenetic position in the deep‐branching Nitrospira phylum. In the present study, improved magnetic enrichment techniques permitted high‐resolution scanning electr
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Fervidicoccus fontis gen. nov., sp. nov., an anaerobic, thermophilic crenarchaeote from terrestrial hot springs, and proposal of Fervidicoccaceae fam. nov. and Fervidicoccales ord. nov

Citation
Perevalova et al. (2010). International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology 60 (9)
Names
Fervidicoccales
Abstract
Two novel thermophilic and slightly acidophilic strains, Kam940Tand Kam1507b, which shared 99 % 16S rRNA gene sequence identity, were isolated from terrestrial hot springs of the Uzon caldera on the Kamchatka peninsula. Cells of both strains were non-motile, regular cocci. Growth was observed between 55 and 85 °C, with an optimum at 65–70 °C (doubling time, 6.1 h), and at pH 4.5–7.5, with optimum growth at pH 5.5–6.0. The isolates were strictly anaerobic organotrophs and grew on a narrow spectru
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Bacterial Community and “ Candidatus Accumulibacter” Population Dynamics in Laboratory-Scale Enhanced Biological Phosphorus Removal Reactors

Citation
He et al. (2010). Applied and Environmental Microbiology 76 (16)
Names
“Accumulibacter”
Abstract
ABSTRACT “ Candidatus Accumulibacter” and total bacterial community dynamics were studied in two lab-scale enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) reactors by using a community fingerprint technique, automated ribosomal intergenic spacer analysis (ARISA). We first evaluated the quantitative capability of ARISA compared to quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). ARISA and qPCR provided comparable relative quantification of the two dominant “
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Identification of New Members of Candidatus Phytoplasma asteris Affecting Tomato Plants in Poland

Citation
Krawczyk et al. (2010). Journal of Phytopathology 158 (7-8)
Names
Ca. Phytoplasma asteris
Abstract
AbstractTwo symptomatic tomato plants exhibiting dwarfing, twisting of shoots and leaves, virescence and phyllody of flowers were collected, respectively, from a greenhouse (Soly07fi) or the field (Soly06gh) in the western region of Poland. Direct and nested polymerase chain reactions (PCR) were performed using universal phytoplasma primers P1/P7 and R16F2n/R16R2. Restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) analysis of the PCR products showed that the RFLP profiles of both tested phytoplasma
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