Publications
| Title | Abstract | Year(sorted descending) Filter | PMID Filter |
|---|
| [synthesis of gibberellin group substances by bacteria]. | 1964 | 14183158 | |
| [penicillinase formation by bac. cereus 5 b strains under pilot plant fermentation conditions]. | 1964 | 14186705 | |
| folic acid inhibition of non-proliferating bacteria. | 1964 | 14187002 | |
| an antibiotic produced by the mycorrhizal fungus cenococcum graniforme. | 1964 | 14187005 | |
| phage maturation in bacillus mycoides cells. | 1964 | 14187913 | |
| spors of microorganisms. xv. the alteration of heat sensitivity and its relation to radiation resistance of bacterial spores. | 1964 | 14190695 | |
| inhibition of penicillinases from gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria by substrate analogues. | 1964 | 14191610 | |
| thermorubin, a new antibiotic from a thermoactinomycete. | 1964 | 15446134 | |
| purification and properties of l-alanine dehydrogenase from vegetative cells of bacillus cereus. | mccormick, neil g. (university of wisconsin, madison), and harlyn o. halvorson. purification and properties of l-alanine dehydrogenase from vegetative cells of bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 87:68-74. 1964.-the l-alanine dehydrogenase from vegetative cells of bacillus cereus strain t has been purified approximately 200-fold. the enzyme has a molecular weight of 248,000 and a turnover number of 80,000 moles of substrate per min per mole of enzyme. the michaelis constants for the substrates and th ... | 1964 | 14105196 |
| studies on the actions of pyrazolopyrimidines in microorganisms. i. 4-hydroxy-6-aminopyrazolopyrimidine. | 1964 | 14109127 | |
| studies on the actions of pyrazolopyrimidines in microorganisms. ii. 4-aminopyrazolopyrimidine. | 1964 | 14109128 | |
| degradation and turnover of bacterial cell wall mucopeptides in growing bacteria. | 1964 | 14113872 | |
| [the consumption of non-gamma antiglobulin]. | 1964 | 14115395 | |
| the relationship of sulfhydryl and disulfide constituents of bacillus cereus to radioresistance. | 1964 | 14120047 | |
| the stereochemical configuration of phosphatidyl glycerol. | 1964 | 14124750 | |
| cell wall replication. i. cell wall growth of bacillus cereus and bacillus megaterium. | 1964 | 14124860 | |
| [the reduction of perchlorate by bacteria. i. studies on intact cells]. | 1964 | 14127299 | |
| distribution of radioactivity in autolyzed cell wall of bacillus cereus during spheroplast formation. | kronish, donald p. (warner-lambert research institute, morris plains, n.j.), raam r. mohan, and benjamin s. schwartz. distribution of radioactivity in autolyzed cell wall of bacillus cereus during spheroplast formation. j. bacteriol. 87:581-587. 1964.-spheroplasts of bacillus cereus strain t were produced from cells grown in the presence of uniformly labeled c(14)-glucose. at regular intervals during spheroplast formation, enzymatically degraded cell wall was isolated by a new procedure. radioac ... | 1964 | 14127573 |
| effect of temperature on the rate of germination in bacillus cereus. | knaysi, georges (cornell university, ithaca, n.y.). effect of temperature on the rate of germination in bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 87:619-622. 1964.-by use of the change of the spores from bright to dark, when observed in dark contrast with a phase microscope, as a criterion for the incipience (first stage) of germination, and increase in the volume of the spore as a criterion for the second stage, it was found that the two stages differed in their cardinal temperatures. in the strain invest ... | 1964 | 14127580 |
| radiosensitivity of several dehydrogenases and transaminases during sporogenesis of bacillus subtilis. | rowley, d. b. (syracuse university, syracuse, n.y.), and h. r. newcomb. radiosensitivity of several dehydrogenases and transaminases during sporogenesis of bacillus subtilis. j. bacteriol. 87:701-709. 1964.-cells of bacillus subtilis grown in a chemically defined medium for 17 hr, subsequently washed, and transferred to a phosphate solution containing cacl(2) sporulated in a reproducible pattern. the synthesis of dipicolinic acid essentially paralleled the appearance of thermoresistant cells. x- ... | 1964 | 14127588 |
| isolation of obligately anaerobic psychrophilic bacteria. | sinclair, n. a. (washington state university, pullman), and j. l. stokes. isolation of obligately anaerobic psychrophilic bacteria. j. bacteriol. 87:562-565. 1964.-a total of 11 strains of strictly anaerobic psychrophilic bacteria have been isolated from soil, mud, and sewage. the organisms grow well at 0 c in liquid and on solid media, and grow only in the complete absence of oxygen. on the basis of shape, sporulation, flagellation, and strictly anaerobic growth, all of the organisms were class ... | 1964 | 14129668 |
| on the unity of bacterial ribosomes. | 1964 | 14135529 | |
| type cultures and proposed neotype cultures of some species in the genus bacillus. | 1964 | 14135533 | |
| structure of poly-beta-hydroxybutyric acid granules. | 1964 | 14135548 | |
| kinetics of dry rupture of bacterial spores in the presence of salt. | sacks, l. e. (u.s. department of agriculture, albany, calif.), peter b. percell, richard s. thomas, and glen f. bailey. kinetics of dry rupture of bacterial spores in the presence of salt. j. bacteriol. 87:952-960. 1964.-the kinetics of breaking spores in the dry state by use of an excess of sodium chloride and a steel ball in a shaking device were investigated. under most conditions, disruption is a first-order process. the disruption-rate constant varies directly with the weight of the ball an ... | 1964 | 14137636 |
| fluorescence microscopy of sporogenic bacilli. | 1964 | 14145682 | |
| [hygienic appreciation of the residual quantity of antibiotics in agricultural products]. | 1964 | 14147469 | |
| spores of microorganisms. xiv. late stages of intrasporangial development of bacterial spores: their sensitivity to antibiotics. | 1964 | 14149845 | |
| interruptions in the polynucleotide strands in bacteriophage dna. | 1964 | 14149959 | |
| pathways of glucose catabolism in bacillus cereus. | goldman, manuel (the university of michigan, ann arbor), and harold j. blumenthal. pathways of glucose catabolism in bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 87:377-386. 1964.-estimates by a radiorespirometric method of the pathways of glucose catabolism of resting-cell suspensions of bacillus cereus strain terminalis indicate that the embden-meyerhof pathway predominates at every stage of development, including the sporogenic and germinative phases. at the filamentous, granular, forespore, and transition ... | 1964 | 14151060 |
| changes in terminal respiratory pathways of intact cells of bacillus cereus at various stages of development. | goldman, manuel (the university of michigan, ann arbor), and harold j. blumenthal. changes in terminal respiratory pathways of intact cells of bacillus cereus at various stages of development. j. bacteriol. 87:387-390. 1964.-the conversion of glucose-6-c(14) to c(14)o(2) was used as the indicator of terminal respiration. resting suspensions of cells that had completed their first division exhibited little terminal respiratory activity, whereas cells that had completed eight to nine divisions exh ... | 1964 | 14151061 |
| mendelism and cancer research. | 1964 | 14152506 | |
| cybernetics, microorganisms and neoplastic disease. | 1964 | 14154024 | |
| the heat sensitivity of bacillus cereus hemolysin. | 1964 | 14154714 | |
| rna and protein synthesis required for bacterial spore formation. | 1964 | 14192366 | |
| species variation of the rna methylases. | 1964 | 14193628 | |
| biochemical effects of ethidium bromide in micro-organisms. | 1964 | 14195645 | |
| characteristics of an abortively disporic variant of bacillus cereus. | young, i. elizabeth (university of alberta, edmonton, alberta, canada). characteristics of an abortively disporic variant of bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 88:242-254. 1964.-a variant [a(-)3] of the bacillus cereus group has been isolated which appears to begin the formation of a spore at each pole of the cell. these pseudo-forespores, like conventional forespores, are initially formed by invagination of the plasma membrane. however, their maturation does not continue the course of normal spore ... | 1964 | 14197894 |
| mode of inhibition of sporulation of bacillus cereus by ethyl malonate and ethyl succinate. | 1964 | 14197898 | |
| immunological specificities of spore and vegetative cell catalases of bacillus cereus. | 1964 | 14197899 | |
| on the mechanism of genetic recombination in transforming bacillus subtilis. | 1964 | 14200386 | |
| metabolic control of penicillinase biosynthesis in bacillus cereus. | yip, lily c. (university of cincinnati, cincinnati, ohio), ramesh shah, and richard a. day. metabolic control of penicillinase biosynthesis in bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 88:297-308. 1964.-penicillinase production in strains 5 and 5/b of bacillus cereus in response to treatment by 6-aminopenicillanic acid (apa), penicillin g, (6-n-alpha-(p-benzyloxyphenoxy)-propionylamino-penicillanic acid, and cephalosporin c (cc) was found to be analogous to that seen in constitutive strains. strain 5 did n ... | 1964 | 14203344 |
| activation of bacterial endospores. | a. keynan (israel institute of biological research, ness ziona, israel), z. evenchik, h. o. halvorson, and j. w. hastings. studies on the activation of bacterial endospores. j. bacteriol. 88:313-318. 1964.-heat activation of bacterial endospores was imitated by suspending spores in reducing agents (mercaptoethanol or thioglycolate) or in a ph less than 4.5. urea (6 m) had no effect on spores. in addition to the well-known activation at 65 c for 45 min, spores were also activated by exposure to 3 ... | 1964 | 14203345 |
| endogenous factor in sporogenesis in bacteria. ii. growth and sporulation in bacillus subtilis. | kerravala, zarrine j. (university of illinois, urbana), v. r. srinivasan, and h. orin halvorson. endogenous factor in sporogenesis in bacteria. ii. growth and sporulation of bacillus subtilis. j. bacteriol. 88:374-380. 1964.-the presence of an endogenous factor in bacillus subtilis which could initiate sporogenesis in suspensions of washed vegetative cells was demonstrated. the inability to obtain a culture of vegetative cells, relatively free from spores, by the "active culture" technique neces ... | 1964 | 14203353 |
| release of cores from bacterial spores by mechanical breakage in acidic media. | 1964 | 14204097 | |
| on the structure of some bacteriophages. | 1964 | 14204750 | |
| induced enzyme synthesis in the absence of concomitant ribonucleic acid synthesis. | 1964 | 14207198 | |
| antibacterial interaction between bromthymol blue and polymyxin b. | 1964 | 14208283 | |
| studies on the characterization of ribonucleases. | 1964 | 14209943 | |
| separation and purification of beta-lysin from normal serum. | 1964 | 14210797 | |
| quinacillin: a comparison with other penicillinase-resistant penicillins. | 1964 | 14213664 | |
| experimental histomoniasis in gnotobiotic turkeys. ii. effects of some cecal bacteria on pathogenesis. | 1964 | 14215481 | |
| microbiological evaluation of 1,3-bis (2-chloroethyl)-i-nitrosourea. | 1964 | 14216155 | |
| changes in patterns of nucleic acid and protein synthesis caused by a purine analogue. | 1964 | 14218580 | |
| electron microscopy of polyribosomes within bacillus cereus. | pfister, r. m. (syracuse university, syracuse, n.y.), and d. g. lundgren. electron microscopy of polyribosomes within bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 88:1119-1129. 1964.-clusters of ribosomes (polyribosomes) were identified in thin sections of bacillus cereus. cells were treated by freezing and thawing to induce partial lysis to permit a closer examination of structural detail. the polyribosomes were (at times) attached to the cytoplasmic membrane, and ribosome clusters contained about 10 to 55 i ... | 1964 | 14219027 |
| sites of adenosine triphosphatase activity in bacteria. | 1964 | 14219037 | |
| [methylation of bacterial polysaccharides rich in hexosamines]. | 1964 | 14222201 | |
| edema factor and phospholipase release by a strain of bacillus cereus. | 1964 | 14222652 | |
| [comparative resistance of semi-synthetic penicillins to penicillinase of various origins]. | 1964 | 14223630 | |
| spores of microorganisms xvi. a contribution to the study of combined radiation- and heat-inactivation of bacterial spores. | 1964 | 14225074 | |
| [study of polyphosphates formed by 2 soil bacteria on a medium supplemented with apatite]. | 1964 | 14226069 | |
| bacterial lipids and the gram staining reaction. | 1964 | 14228212 | |
| ultrastructural localization of mineral matter in bacterial spores by micronincineration. | the fine localization of mineral matter in spores of bacillus megaterium and bacillus cereus was studied by the technique of microincineration adapted for use with the electron microscope. the specimens, which included intact and thin-sectioned spores as well as shed spore coats, were burned either in the conventional way at high temperature or by a new technique using electrically excited oxygen at nearly room temperature. the ash residues were examined by bright field, dark field, and diffract ... | 1964 | 14228506 |
| the site of action of phospholipase a on beta-lecithins. | 1964 | 14230824 | |
| evolutionary theory and the etiology of cancer. | 1964 | 14232155 | |
| cancer and plant tumors. | 1964 | 14232692 | |
| the relation between penicillin structure and penicillinase activity. | 1964 | 14234487 | |
| acridine orange binding by micrococcus lysodeikticus. | beers, roland f., jr. (johns hopkins university, baltimore, md). acridine orange binding by micrococcus lysodeikticus. j. bacteriol. 88:1249-1256. 1964.-micrococcus lysodeikticus cells bind acridine orange (ao) reversibly. the adsorption isotherm is consistent with a highly cooperative-type binding similar to that observed with polyadenylic acid. the cells exhibit a strong buffering action on the concentration of free ao which remains constant (1 mug/ml) over a range from 5 to 95% saturation of ... | 1964 | 14234778 |
| properties of electrodialyzed bacterial spores. | harper, m. k. (u.s. department of agriculture, washington, d.c.), h. r. curran, and m. j. pallansch. properties of electrodialyzed bacterial spores. j. bacteriol. 88:1338-1340. 1964.-washed spores of bacillus cereus, b. megaterium, and b. stearothermophilis suspended in distilled water were electrodialyzed at a potential of 250 v, 50 ma, for 6.5 hr, under conditions which precluded rise in temperature or shift in ph. dipicolinic acid (dpa) was not released from the spores by electrodialysis, as ... | 1964 | 14234790 |
| organic nutrients required for growth and sporulation of bacillus cereus. | 1964 | 14234814 | |
| microbiological assay of aspartocin in pharmaceutical preparations containing chlortetracycline. | 1964 | 14234908 | |
| [a new method of preparing microorganism specimens for electron microscopy]. | 1964 | 14237052 | |
| stimulating and inhibiting antibodies for bacterial penicillinase. | 1964 | 14239845 | |
| spectrochemical analysis of inorganic elements in bacteria. | rouf, m. a. (washington state university, pullman). spectrochemical analysis of inorganic elements in bacteria. j. bacteriol. 88:1545-1549. 1964.-quantitative spectrochemical analyses of inorganic elements in the vegetative cells of escherichia coli, sphaerotilus natans, micrococcus roseus, bacillus cereus, and the spores of b. cereus were made. the following elements were found to be present in the ash samples: b, na, mg, al, si, p, k, ca, ti, cr, mn, fe, ni, cu, zn, sr, s, ag, sn, ba, pb, v, a ... | 1964 | 14240935 |
| ultrastructure of the exosporium enveloping spores of bacillus cereus. | gerhardt, philipp (the university of michigan, ann arbor), and edgar ribi. ultrastructure of the exosporium enveloping spores of bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 88:1774-1789. 1964.-structural details in the outer envelope of spores, such as those of bacillus cereus and b. anthracis, were studied by electron microscopy and by x-ray diffraction analysis. procedures were developed for isolating homogeneous fragments of the membrane with minimal damage to or germination of the spore proper. exosporiu ... | 1964 | 14240968 |
| [ecmoline salt of phenoxymethylpenicillin]. | 1964 | 14242797 | |
| [particular sensitivity to heat of some cereus-anthracis-mycoides phage strains]. | 1963 | 14165841 | |
| [comparative study of the blood concentrations obtained with different tetracyclines]. | 1963 | 14129950 | |
| [cytoplasmatic factors and microorganisms in the etiology of neoplasms]. | 1963 | 14125596 | |
| [contribution to the pathogenesis of aerobic sporogenous bacterium (bacillus) infection in mice]. | 1963 | 14119570 | |
| [the enteropathogenic effect of aerobic spore-forming bacilli in rodents]. | 1963 | 14119883 | |
| sensitization of bacterial spores to lysozyme and to hydrogen peroxide with agents which rupture disulphide bonds. | 1963 | 14114930 | |
| [cellular immunity in cancer]. | 1963 | 14113609 | |
| [on changes in lewis blood-group substance induced by decomposing enzymes]. | 1963 | 14105376 | |
| toxin production as a criterion for differentiating bacillus cereus and bacillus anthracis. | 1963 | 14013788 | |
| [study-of the effects produced by ultraviolet light on bacteria. vi. alteration of the metabolism of nucleic acids in bacillus cereus]. | 1963 | 14017548 | |
| the interaction of penicillinase with penicillins. ii. temperature-dependent changes induced in penicillinase by competitive inhibitors. | 1963 | 14021423 | |
| the incorporation of 8-azaguanine into soluble ribonucleic acid of bacillus cereus. | 1963 | 13930103 | |
| antimicrobial substances from aspen tissue grown in vitro. | isolated aspen tissue, when grown in vitro for 3 weeks on agar medium, yielded antimicrobial substances which produced inhibitory zones when the culture plates were inoculated with fusarium roseum, saccharomyces cervisiae, bacillus subtilis, bacillus cereus, penicillium, roqueforti, torula utilis, sarcina lutea, flavobacterium aquatile, pullularia pullulans, and staphylococcus aureus. | 1963 | 13933593 |
| penicillinase from klebsiella aerogenes. a comparison with penicillinases from gram-positive species. | 1963 | 13952353 | |
| biochemistry of sporulation. i. metabolism of acetate by vegetative and sporulating cells. | hanson, richard s. (university of illinois, urbana), v. r. srinivasan, and h. orin halvorson. biochemistry of sporulation. i. metabolism of acetate by vegetative and sporulating cells. j. bacteriol. 85:451-460. 1963.-the transition from the vegetative to the sporulating cycle in a sporeformer is marked by a change in the enzymatic machinery of the cell. when vegetative cells of bacillus cereus strain t are grown in a glucose-yeast extract-minerals medium, acetate accumulates until the beginning ... | 1963 | 13952646 |
| the swelling of bacterial spores during germination and outgrowth. | 1963 | 13954805 | |
| identification of a bacterial phospholipid as an o-ornithine ester of phosphatidyl glycerol. | 1963 | 13955094 | |
| the swarmers of bacillus cereus. | 1963 | 13971247 | |
| "endotrophic" sporulation. | 1963 | 13971376 | |
| partial purification and properties of two phospholipases of bacillus cereus. | slein, milton w. (u.s. army chemical corps biological laboratories, fort detrick, frederick, md.) and gerald f. logan, jr. partial purification and properties of two phospholipases of bacillus cereus. j. bacteriol. 85:369-381. 1963.-culture filtrates of bacillus cereus contain a phosphatasemia factor (pf) that markedly increases blood alkaline phosphatase after intravenous injection into animals, and that releases alkaline phosphatase from epiphyseal bone slices in vitro. fractionation of cultur ... | 1963 | 13989217 |
| differences between pencillinases from gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria. | 1963 | 13989487 | |
| repression of staphylococcus aureus by food bacteria. i. effect of environmental factors on inhibition. | the effects of environmental factors on the inhibition of an enterotoxin-producing strain of staphylococcus aureus by food bacteria were investigated. type of medium and temperature of incubation were important factors in determining the amount of inhibition. the ph range of maximal inhibition was found to be 7.4 to 6.2. availability of oxygen was not a factor. as the ratios of inhibitor to staphylococcus were increased from 1:1 to 10:1 and 100:1, the amount of inhibition was markedly increased. ... | 1963 | 13994250 |
| repression of staphylococcus aureus by food bacteria. ii. causes of inhibition. | two food bacteria, serratia marcescens and pseudomonas sp. cs-1, inhibited an enterotoxigenic strain of staphylococcus aureus, apparently by out-competing it for nutrients. five others, bacillus cereus, proteus vulgaris, escherichia coli h-52, aerobacter aerogenes, and achromobacter sp., inhibited by means of antibiotic substances which were seitz-filterable, dialyzable, and stable at 90 c for 10 min. inhibition was not caused by changes in ph, oxidation-reduction potential, or production of per ... | 1963 | 13994251 |
| [bacteriostatic and bactericidal activity of erythromycin base and chloramphenicol used separately and in combination]. | 1963 | 13997032 |