Isolation of a New Polysaccharide-Digesting Bacterium from a Salt Marsh
AUTOR(ES)
Andrykovitch, George
RESUMO
A new marine bacterium that digested a variety of storage and structural polysaccharides, including agar, was isolated. Strain 2-40 is a nonfermentative gram-negative, polarly flagellated rod that sometimes grew as a filamentous helix and secreted a melaninlike pigment. Its characteristics conform to those of no previously described species.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=202596Documentos Relacionados
- Novel Features of the Polysaccharide-Digesting Gliding Bacterium Flavobacterium johnsoniae as Revealed by Genome Sequence Analysis▿ †
- Anthropogenic modification of New England salt marsh landscapes
- AGARASE FROM AN AGAR-DIGESTING BACTERIUM
- Isolation of Bacteriophages of the Marine Bacterium Beneckea natriegens from Coastal Salt Marshes1
- Phylogenetic diversity of Archaea in sediment samples from a coastal salt marsh.