journal
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852902/mechanisms-and-control-of-mrna-turnover-in-saccharomyces-cerevisiae
#21
REVIEW
G Caponigro, R Parker
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852901/bacterial-scission-of-ether-bonds
#22
REVIEW
G F White, N J Russell, E C Tidswell
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852900/enteric-bacterial-toxins-mechanisms-of-action-and-linkage-to-intestinal-secretion
#23
REVIEW
C L Sears, J B Kaper
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852899/significance-of-bacterial-surface-active-compounds-in-interaction-of-bacteria-with-interfaces
#24
REVIEW
T R Neu
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852898/genetic-networks-that-regulate-development-in-dictyostelium-cells
#25
REVIEW
W F Loomis
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852897/programmed-translational-frameshifting
#26
REVIEW
P J Farabaugh
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852896/recent-advances-in-the-social-and-developmental-biology-of-the-myxobacteria
#27
REVIEW
M Dworkin
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852895/histidine-biosynthetic-pathway-and-genes-structure-regulation-and-evolution
#28
REVIEW
P Alifano, R Fani, P LiĆ², A Lazcano, M Bazzicalupo, M S Carlomagno, C B Bruni
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852894/molecular-biology-of-the-symbiotic-pathogenic-bacteria-xenorhabdus-spp-and-photorhabdus-spp
#29
REVIEW
S Forst, K Nealson
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8852893/genetic-regulation-of-phospholipid-biosynthesis-in-saccharomyces-cerevisiae
#30
REVIEW
M L Greenberg, J M Lopes
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
March 1996: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531892/chromosome-length-polymorphism-in-fungi
#31
REVIEW
M E Zolan
The examination of fungal chromosomes by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis has revealed that length polymorphism is widespread in both sexual and asexual species. This review summarizes characteristics of fungal chromosome-length polymorphism and possible mitotic and meiotic mechanisms of chromosome length change. Most fungal chromosome-length polymorphisms are currently uncharacterized with respect to content and origin. However, it is clear that long tandem repeats, such as tracts of rRNA genes, are frequently variable in length and that other chromosomal rearrangements are suppressed during normal mitotic growth...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531891/natural-plasmids-of-filamentous-fungi
#32
REVIEW
A J Griffiths
Among eukaryotes, plasmids have been found in fungi and plants but not in animals. Most plasmids are mitochondrial. In filamentous fungi, plasmids are commonly encountered in isolates from natural populations. Individual populations may show a predominance of one type, but some plasmids have a global distribution, often crossing species boundaries. Surveys have shown that strains can contain more than one type of plasmid and that different types appear to be distributed independently. In crosses, plasmids are generally inherited maternally...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531890/production-and-function-of-cytokines-in-natural-and-acquired-immunity-to-candida-albicans-infection
#33
REVIEW
R B Ashman, J M Papadimitriou
Host resistance against infections caused by the yeast Candida albicans is mediated predominantly by polymorphonuclear leukocytes and macrophages. Antigens of Candida stimulate lymphocyte proliferation and cytokine synthesis, and in both humans and mice, these cytokines enhance the candidacidal functions of the phagocytic cells. In systemic candidiasis in mice, cytokine production has been found to be a function of the CD4+ T helper (Th) cells. The Th1 subset of these cells, characterized by the production of gamma interferon and interleukin-2, is associated with macrophage activation and enhanced resistance against reinfection, whereas the Th2 subset, which produces interleukins-4, -6, and -10, is linked to the development of chronic disease...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531889/control-of-rrna-transcription-in-escherichia-coli
#34
REVIEW
C Condon, C Squires, C L Squires
The control of rRNA synthesis in response to both extra- and intracellular signals has been a subject of interest to microbial physiologists for nearly four decades, beginning with the observations that Salmonella typhimurium cells grown on rich medium are larger and contain more RNA than those grown on poor medium. This was followed shortly by the discovery of the stringent response in Escherichia coli, which has continued to be the organism of choice for the study of rRNA synthesis. In this review, we summarize four general areas of E...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531888/nitrogen-control-in-bacteria
#35
REVIEW
M J Merrick, R A Edwards
Nitrogen metabolism in prokaryotes involves the coordinated expression of a large number of enzymes concerned with both utilization of extracellular nitrogen sources and intracellular biosynthesis of nitrogen-containing compounds. The control of this expression is determined by the availability of fixed nitrogen to the cell and is effected by complex regulatory networks involving regulation at both the transcriptional and posttranslational levels. While the most detailed studies to date have been carried out with enteric bacteria, there is a considerable body of evidence to show that the nitrogen regulation (ntr) systems described in the enterics extend to many other genera...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531887/streptococcus-pneumoniae-virulence-factors-pathogenesis-and-vaccines
#36
REVIEW
E AlonsoDeVelasco, A F Verheul, J Verhoef, H Snippe
Although pneumococcal conjugate vaccines are close to being licensed, a more profound knowledge of the virulence factors responsible for the morbidity and mortality caused by Streptococcus pneumoniae is necessary. This review deals with the major structures of pneumococci involved in the pathogenesis of pneumococcal disease and their interference with the defense mechanisms of the host. It is well known that protection against S. pneumoniae is the result of phagocytosis of invading pathogens. For this process, complement and anticapsular polysaccharide antibodies are required...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531886/conjugative-transposons-an-unusual-and-diverse-set-of-integrated-gene-transfer-elements
#37
REVIEW
A A Salyers, N B Shoemaker, A M Stevens, L Y Li
Conjugative transposons are integrated DNA elements that excise themselves to form a covalently closed circular intermediate. This circular intermediate can either reintegrate in the same cell (intracellular transposition) or transfer by conjugation to a recipient and integrate into the recipient's genome (intercellular transposition). Conjugative transposons were first found in gram-positive cocci but are now known to be present in a variety of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria also. Conjugative transposons have a surprisingly broad host range, and they probably contribute as much as plasmids to the spread of antibiotic resistance genes in some genera of disease-causing bacteria...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531885/genetic-elements-of-plant-viruses-as-tools-for-genetic-engineering
#38
REVIEW
A R Mushegian, R J Shepherd
Viruses have developed successful strategies for propagation at the expense of their host cells. Efficient gene expression, genome multiplication, and invasion of the host are enabled by virus-encoded genetic elements, many of which are well characterized. Sequences derived from plant DNA and RNA viruses can be used to control expression of other genes in vivo. The main groups of plant virus genetic elements useful in genetic engineering are reviewed, including the signals for DNA-dependent and RNA-dependent RNA synthesis, sequences on the virus mRNAs that enable translational control, and sequences that control processing and intracellular sorting of virus proteins...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/8531884/role-of-nitric-oxide-in-parasitic-infections
#39
REVIEW
S L James
Nitric oxide is produced by a number of different cell types in response to cytokine stimulation and thus has been found to play a role in immunologically mediated protection against a growing list of protozoan and helminth parasites in vitro and in animal models. The biochemical basis of its effects on the parasite targets appears to involve primarily inactivation of enzymes crucial to energy metabolism and growth, although it has other biologic activities as well. NO is produced not only by macrophages and macrophage-like cells commonly associated with the effector arm of cell-mediated immune reactivity but also by cells commonly considered to lie outside the immunologic network, such as hepatocytes and endothelial cells, which are intimately involved in the life cycle of a number of parasites...
December 1995: Microbiological Reviews
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7565416/stress-induced-transcriptional-activation
#40
REVIEW
W H Mager, A J De Kruijff
Living cells, both prokaryotic and eukaryotic, employ specific sensory and signalling systems to obtain and transmit information from their environment in order to adjust cellular metabolism, growth, and development to environmental alterations. Among external factors that trigger such molecular communications are nutrients, ions, drugs and other compounds, and physical parameters such as temperature and pressure. One could consider stress imposed on cells as any disturbance of the normal growth condition and even as any deviation from optimal growth circumstances...
September 1995: Microbiological Reviews
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