Talmudic Question #207 How come the smallest cells of a given bacterial species are also the ones with the slowest growth rate? Read more →
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Talmudic Question #207 How come the smallest cells of a given bacterial species are also the ones with the slowest growth rate? Read more →
Posted on September 28, 2023 at 01:30 AM in Talmudic Questions | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Mechas — The diversity of life on earth is not only astounding but inundated with myriad expressions of host-symbiont relationships. Among these, microbial symbionts are so pervasive that they could be considered the rule, rather than the exception, among multicellular eukaryotes. Read more →
Posted on September 25, 2023 at 01:30 AM in Ecology, Evolution | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Mechas — We recently posted an update on horizontal gene transfer (HGT) to highlight the existence of strategies used by bacteria to exchange DNA – in addition to those traditionally acknowledged, that is transformation, transduction and conjugation. One of these more recently recognized mechanisms involves entities called gene transfer agents (GTAs). Read more →
Posted on September 21, 2023 at 01:30 AM in Ecology, Evolution | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Roberto — For many of you, the rpoS allele in your E. coli strains might not matter. But if you are interested in the general stress response or adaptations to stationary phase, you might want to know if you are starting out with a wild-type rpoS gene. Read more →
Posted on September 18, 2023 at 02:54 AM in Odds & Ends, Physiology & Genetics | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Roberto — A little over fifteen years ago in the early days of STC, in a post Elio called "On Being 80," he celebrated his 80th birthday by sharing his life experience of melding his love of bacteria at the bench with his love of hunting mushrooms in the wild. Read more →
Posted on September 14, 2023 at 01:30 AM in Odds & Ends | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Janie — "Self" versus "other" delineations in biology are fascinating, from both a biological and conceptual standpoint. The example that probably leaps first into people's minds is the human microbiome: Read more →
Posted on September 11, 2023 at 12:30 AM in Viruses | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Roberto — In the past, when I thought about lactate (or lactic acid), two things immediately came to mind: the many ways lactic acid bacteria (LAB) furnish us with delicious, fermented foods and the grueling "lactate threshold" training sessions in preparing for endurance athletic events. Read more →
Posted on September 07, 2023 at 01:30 AM in Odds & Ends | Permalink | Comments (0)
by Merry — When I stumbled across the term bacterioneuston, I discovered a whole new world where the air meets the sea. I found that marine neuston had long been used to refer to the diverse flora and fauna inhabiting the topmost 5 cm of the oceans – a distinctly different assemblage than found in the waters below. Read more →
Posted on September 04, 2023 at 12:30 AM in Odds & Ends | Permalink | Comments (0)