• 1996). "Two coryneform bacteria isolated from the surface of French Gruyère and Beaufort cheeses are new species of the genus Brachybacterium: Brachybacterium alimentarium sp. (wikipedia.org)
  • The natural place to seek such enzymes is in soil bacteria and fungi, as these aggregates, despite not being degraded in mammals, do not accumulate in soil in which animal carcasses are decaying, nor in graveyards where humans are decaying. (fightaging.org)
  • We also discovered that soil fungi, plants, and some bacteria possess peroxidase and carotenoid cleavage oxygenase enzymes that effectively destroy with varied degrees of efficiency and selectivity the carotenoid lipofuscin found in macular degeneration. (fightaging.org)
  • Promising activities were found against bacteria, parasites (Plasmodium), human and phytopathogenic fungi, some of which were multidrug resistant (MDR) microorganisms. (scialert.net)
  • Many species of bacteria can produce these enzymes and are broadly categorized as fibrolytic bacteria. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • The simple definition of probiotics is that they are live, naturally-occurring microorganisms (usually bacteria) that function internally to promote healthy digestion and beneficial bacteria, boost the immune system, and contribute to general health. (jonbarron.org)
  • The good bacteria include species and strains that we evolved with, like acidopholus and bifidobacterium. (ibstreatmentcenter.com)
  • The bad bacteria and microorganisms include many species and strains that don't symbiotically help us, but rather upset the balance. (ibstreatmentcenter.com)
  • These can include bacteria that crowd out the species we need or other organisms like yeast. (ibstreatmentcenter.com)
  • Since the advent of medical antibiotics it is quite common for people to use wide-spectrum anti-biotics and unwittingly kill off the bacteria they need, allowing bad microorganisms to 'claim more turf' and upset the balance. (ibstreatmentcenter.com)
  • Melting permafrost in the Swiss Alps is revealing interesting species of bacteria that scientists hope can result in new medicines and environmentally friendly solutions. (swissinfo.ch)
  • Some bacteria species are microaerophilic , meaning that they grow in low concentrations of oxygen. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • EAZYBED PRO is a bedding conditioner with live bacteria and enzymes. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • EAZYBED PRO is a concentrated combination of enzymes and bacteria on a carrier made up of vegetal and mineral ingredients. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • Fiber passes through the digestive tract, unaltered by mammalian enzymes until it encounters bacteria and other microorganisms in the gut that can metabolize it. (usda.gov)
  • The microbiota were not cultures, but rather a mixture of the hundreds of bacteria and other microbial species from the gut microbiomes of the animals. (usda.gov)
  • With the growth of bacteria on the differential medium, chemical processes take place due to the presence in microbial cells of different enzymes. (assignmentexpert.com)
  • However, inflammatory conditions are associated with increased oxygen levels, causing a decline in the population of beneficial gut bacteria while promoting the growth of microbial species that worsen inflammation and diseases. (pewtrusts.org)
  • For instance, although anaerobic bacteria, such as Clostridium thermocellum and Acetivibrio cellulalyticus, integrate diverse cellulases, aerobic organisms, such as Trichoderma species and several actinomycetes, generate and exude free lignocellulolytic enzymes (Cells). (pulsus.com)
  • Microorganisms capable of catabolizing lignin-derived ar- carbohydrate and protein components of the organic matter omatics are essentially fungi and bacteria (Bugg et al. (lu.se)
  • [ 2 , 3 ] We are relatively ignorant of the functional and structural contributions of microorganisms outside of gut bacteria, with only a handful of publications looking at the gut virome (viruses and bacteriophages), mycome (fungi) and other micro-eukaryotes including protozoa. (medscape.com)
  • Agro-industrial wastes, such as sugar cane bagasse, corn cob and rice bran, have been widely investigated via different fermentation strategies for the production of enzymes. (mdpi.com)
  • Solid-state fermentation holds much potential compared with submerged fermentation methods for the utilization of agro-based wastes for enzyme production. (mdpi.com)
  • Ces dernières annĂ©es, les mĂ©thodes biologiques, telles que la fermentation Ă  l'Ă©tat solide, ont acquis une grande importance pour la biorestauration de molĂ©cules complexes en raison de leur efficacitĂ© et de leur faible impact environnemental. (ac.be)
  • Evaluation of three individual fungal species, as well as various fungal consortia of these species, for the degradation of a mixture of dyes, brilliant blue - allura red, through solid-state fermentation. (ac.be)
  • The present study used shotgun metagenomics to determine the enzyme-coding genes of the microbiota found in two different groups of cocoa beans varieties during the fermentation process. (frontiersin.org)
  • Changes in the microbiota enzyme-coding genes over time pointed to the distinct ordering of fermentation at 24-48 h (T1), 72-96 h (T2), and 120-144 h (T3). (frontiersin.org)
  • Specific expansion of genes for secretory hydrolytic enzymes, amino acid metabolism and amino acid/sugar uptake transporters supports the idea that A. oryzae is an ideal microorganism for fermentation. (nature.com)
  • Botanicals that help the body in stopping microorganism fermentation in the stomach. (healthy-living.org)
  • They can internalise and kill many microbes , each phagocytic event resulting in the formation of a phagosome into which reactive oxygen species and hydrolytic enzymes are secreted. (bionity.com)
  • In planta production of hyperthermophilic hydrolytic enzymes could prevent the detrimental effects often seen resulting from the expression of recombinant mesophilic enzymes to plant hosts. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Pretreatment utilizes high temperatures, corrosive chemicals, or ionic liquids to break the bonds among the three components, thereby increasing accessibility of hydrolytic enzymes to cellulose [ 4 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • One of the challenges associated with expressing hydrolytic enzymes in plants is the prevention of detrimental effects of the enzymes on the plant host. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Biochemistry bioassays confirmed the involvement of monooxygenase enzyme, carboxylesterase, superoxide dismutase and peroxidase in multi-insecticide resistance mechanism. (preprints.org)
  • The respiratory burst involves the activation of the enzyme NADPH oxidase, which produces large quantities of superoxide , a reactive oxygen species. (bionity.com)
  • Superoxide dismutates, spontaneously or through catalysis via enzymes known as superoxide dismutases (Cu/ZnSOD and MnSOD), to hydrogen peroxide, which is then converted to hypochlorous acid (HOCl, also known as chlorine bleach) by the green heme enzyme myeloperoxidase . (bionity.com)
  • In cells , antioxidants such as glutathione , mycothiol or bacillithiol , and enzyme systems like superoxide dismutase , can prevent damage from oxidative stress . (wikipedia.org)
  • either do not elicit or actively suppress the oxidative step, whereas other organisms produce enzymes (eg, catalase, glutathione reductase, superoxide dismutase) that mitigate the oxidative products. (msdmanuals.com)
  • The main fungi species were Penicillium, Fusarium, and Verticillium. (cdc.gov)
  • Given the widespread occurrence of NADases and their prominent role in microbial infection mechanisms we wondered whether pathogenic fungi may also produce similar enzymes. (nature.com)
  • In this work, we identify NADases on the surface of fungi and show that these enzymes are predominately found in pathogenic species. (nature.com)
  • We propose that these NADases may represent hitherto unrecognized factors that convey advantages for the fungi during interaction with the host or competing microorganisms in the environment. (nature.com)
  • Furthermore, other microorganisms can similarly degrade fiber including protozoa and fungi. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • Only 4 species- Thermomyces lanuginosus, Talaromyces thermophilus, Aspergillus fumigatus, and Gibellulopsis nigrescens of the 27 strains of thermophilic fungi were dominant, with A. fumigatus and T. lanuginosus the other two species. (pulsus.com)
  • As a result of the shifting composting environment, several strains of the same species emerged separately at different phases of composting, exhibiting phenotypes with variable thermotolerance and unique enzyme expression that had not been previously recorded for the species. (pulsus.com)
  • Potential candidates for the synthesis of thermozymes were identified as Bacillus thermoamylovorans, Geobacillus thermodenitrificans, T. lanuginosus, and A. fumigatus strains with high enzyme activity. (pulsus.com)
  • Clarithromycin and erythromycin are macrolide antimicrobials indicated for the treatment of infections caused by susceptible strains of designated microorganisms. (medscape.com)
  • Some of the enzymes which generate aromatic radicals that break down most prominent bacterial strains found were isolated and tax- the complex linkages present in lignin to compounds of lower onomically identified using 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) se- molecular weight. (lu.se)
  • Caatinga Biome is characterized by extreme habitat conditions and presents source of new species like endophytic microorganisms with potential bioactive compounds synthesis. (unesp.br)
  • Indeed, fiber is an essential component of plants which is resistant to degradation by the digestive enzymes of most monogastric animals. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • L. acidophilus is a well-researched, hardy probiotic highly resistant to gastric acid, bile salts, and digestive enzymes. (giprohealth.com)
  • Further, most people eat too much processed food, not enough fermented foods or sprouted foods, don't do proper food combining, don't eat enough raw food (with its natural enzymes), and as a result their digestive enzymes are insufficient to digest their food well, and so they are inextricably on a downhill course into poorer and poorer health. (healthy-living.org)
  • At T2, the genes linked to the metabolism of ceramides and hopanoids lipids were clearly dominant, which are associated with the resistance of microbial species to extreme temperatures and pH values. (frontiersin.org)
  • In summary, mixed planting treatment was more helpful to improve soil enzyme activity, microbial biomass, and enrich soil microbial diversity, which was of great significance to maintain the balance of soil ecosystem. (bioone.org)
  • This suggests that the micro-organisms present in soil have enzymes capable of breaking these aggregates down, and work now being carried on at Arizona State University, has already confirmed this analysis. (fightaging.org)
  • Soil Virus Offers Insight into Maintaining Microorganisms Through a collaborative effort, researchers have identified a protein in soil viruses that may promote soil health. (doe.gov)
  • Rhizodegradation: The organic pollutants present around the rhizosphere in soil or polluted water is degraded by microorganism activities. (org.in)
  • The species diversity in the permafrost soil is much higher than on the surface. (swissinfo.ch)
  • They include species of Rhizobium and Azotobacter , both found in the soil. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • Soil microorganisms relate to each other - some as parasites on others, some forming substances essential to others for growth, and some having no effect on each other. (nzdl.org)
  • We propose that fungal NADases may convey advantages during interaction with the host or competing microorganisms. (nature.com)
  • In addition, entirely biological routes to generate bioethanol were investigated using consolidated bioprocessing (CBP), which entailed using a consortium of fungal microorganisms. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • A primary filamentous fungal species was used as a cellulolytic enzyme factory whilst a yeast strain was used to ferment any liberated sugars to ethanol. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • In fact, lignocellulose depolymerization occurs in natural ecosystems with a high degree of efficiency due to the cooperative activity of several enzymes produced by microorganisms belonging to different taxonomic groups. (pulsus.com)
  • Before you were born, your intestines were free of microorganisms. (jonbarron.org)
  • These microorganisms, in turn, produce a large amount of essential byproducts in the intestines, which act as a barrier to the growth of dangerous pathogenic microbes that can cause disease and infection. (jonbarron.org)
  • They help us to digest food by producing enzymes, manufacture some of the essential nutrients that we need to live, assist in the development of our immune system, and prevent infection by occupying the space in the intestines that unwelcome organisms would thrive in, if they could. (ibstreatmentcenter.com)
  • S. boulardii does not colonize the human intestinal tract and is not one of the microorganisms that normally inhabit the intestines. (klaire.com)
  • This can be accomplished by equipping the lysosome with new enzymes that can degrade the relevant material. (fightaging.org)
  • The trees enzymes are able to degrade hazardous substances like chlorinated solvents, herbicides. (org.in)
  • There are several compounds like sterol, fatty acids, nucleotides amino acids, flavanone and other enzymes are released by roots of trees and degrade the contaminants around the rhizosphere. (org.in)
  • The enzymes harbour a tuberculosis necrotizing toxin (TNT) domain and are predominately present in pathogenic species. (nature.com)
  • Certain pathogenic species, such as Clostridium species, are anaerobic. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • Two important species supporting the small and large intestine. (giprohealth.com)
  • Some species also exhibited antioxidant, anti-inflammatory activities and enzymes inhibitory properties. (scialert.net)
  • This was achieved through investigating and attempting to optimise a range of different pre-treatments in order to enhance the subsequent cellulolytic enzyme saccharification yields to produce a high glucose concentration feedstock which could then be fermented to produce bioethanol. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • 25% w/v). These included dilute acid and alkali hydrothermal, alkaline peroxide, caustic (NaOH) and microwave based autohydrolytical protocols which were all capable (under optimal conditions) of achieving close to 90% theoretical glucose yields when using an excess of cellulolytic enzyme. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • In planta expression of cellulolytic enzymes is an alternative to producing the enzymes in microorganisms. (biomedcentral.com)
  • The structure of the dimeric A. fumigatus enzyme revealed the presence of a Ca 2+ binding site whose occupancy partially regulates enzymatic activity. (nature.com)
  • Optimisation of the enzymatic saccharification step was attempted and involved using a batch-fed protocol, with supplementary enzymes, and a high-torque mixing system were still only able to achieve ca. 43% theoretical glucose yields when operating at 15% w/v solids loading. (nottingham.ac.uk)
  • This would allow the biomass feedstock to serve a dual role, as both enzyme supplier and substrate for ethanol production [ 9 ]. (biomedcentral.com)
  • To increase composting efficiency and offer thermostable biomass-degrading enzymes for biorefineries, it is important to have a thorough understanding of the thermophilic microbial population involved in such biotransformation. (pulsus.com)
  • The A. fumigatus and N. crassa enzymes cleave NAD + and NADP + but not their reduced counterparts, NADH and NADPH. (nature.com)
  • Application of such enzymes for waste management would be beneficial for reducing the quantity of waste, diminishing the negative effects of waste and pollution on the environment, and would be beneficial in bio-converting the waste products into alternate sources of energy. (preprints.org)
  • The beneficial point of this method is these all process of reduction and degradation occur inside the trees and do not depend on microorganisms. (org.in)
  • It promotes the development of these beneficial microorganisms in the bedding, which will have subsequent benefits in maintaining animal welfare and on improving manure/slurry quality. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • EAZYBED PRO encourages positive fermentations in the bedding/litter and manure/slurry by the inclusion of beneficial microorganisms and enzymes in the bedding material or area. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • In a mixed culture one microorganism may produce needed growth factors or essential growth compounds such as carbon or nitrogen sources beneficial to a second microorganism. (nzdl.org)
  • The applicability of different enzymes such as glycosidases, glycosyltransferases, glycophosphorylases and glycosynthases have been de-scribed around the review article considering their advantages and disadvantages of these biocat-alysts in the stereoselective and regioselective synthesis of different types of glycosylated mole-cules, phenolic and aliphatic alcohols, oligosaccharides, polysaccharides, glycoderivatives, glyco-peptides and glycoproteins with a clear focus on food and pharmaceutical chemistry. (preprints.org)
  • These elements often are used for the synthesis of enzymes. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • Microorganisms present in the compost samples were se- scrutinized (MartĂ­nez et al. (lu.se)
  • Fecal particles, containing microorganisms and proteolytic enzymes, ranged from 2 to 0.4 microns in diameter and represented the major dust burden to the alveoli. (cdc.gov)
  • Neutrophils are phagocytes, capable of ingesting microorganisms or particles. (bionity.com)
  • These glycosyl hydrolases, which include a suite of enzymes that breakdown cellulose and hemicellulose, are commonly produced in microorganisms. (biomedcentral.com)
  • For example, Streptococcus pyogenes and Mycobacterium tuberculosis produce enzyme toxins that trigger necrotic cell death of host macrophages by rapid NAD + depletion. (nature.com)
  • Comparison of the three aspergilli species revealed the presence of syntenic blocks and A. oryzae -specific blocks (lacking synteny with A. nidulans and A. fumigatus ) in a mosaic manner throughout the genome of A. oryzae . (nature.com)
  • Freezing food slows down decomposition by turning residual moisture into ice, inhibiting the growth of most bacterial species. (pvillage.org)
  • By identifying the specific bacterial species and enzymes that metabolize these molecules, we hope to develop more individualized approaches to medicine and nutrition. (carleton.edu)
  • By limiting the internal production of toxic oxygen molecules and by identifying and replacing its vulnerable enzymes with oxygen-tolerant equivalents, the lab aims to identify the metabolic processes that underlie anaerobic bacteria's inability to survive in oxygen-rich environments. (pewtrusts.org)
  • A biofilm comprises any syntrophic consortium of microorganisms in which cells stick to each other and often also to a surface. (wikipedia.org)
  • Virtually all chemical substances in microorganisms contain carbon in some form, whether they be proteins, fats, carbohydrates, or lipids. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • Transcriptional regulation of the genes in metabolic pathways is a highly successful strategy, which is virtually universal in microorganisms. (lu.se)
  • When you're healthy, over 100 trillion microorganisms from some 400 different species flourish in your intestinal tract, aiding in digestion, absorption, and the production of significant amounts of B vitamins, vitamin K, and enzymes. (jonbarron.org)
  • Rate of arabinitol production by pathogenic yeast species. (scialert.net)
  • His team has already described 10 new species together with other research groups, and has just discovered another new type of yeast - a fungus that is perfectly at home at -5C. (swissinfo.ch)
  • S. boulardii is genetically and functionally distinct from brewer's yeast (S. cerevisiae) and different from pathogenic Candida species. (klaire.com)
  • The consumption of oxygen during the generation of reactive oxygen species has been termed the "respiratory burst," although it actually has nothing to do with respiration or energy production. (bionity.com)
  • The evolution of angiosperm plants between 50 and 200 million years ago resulted in the development of many antioxidant pigments - particularly during the Jurassic period - as chemical defences against reactive oxygen species that are byproducts of photosynthesis . (wikipedia.org)
  • [9] Research into how vitamin E prevents the process of lipid peroxidation led to the identification of antioxidants as reducing agents that prevent oxidative reactions, often by scavenging reactive oxygen species before they can damage cells. (wikipedia.org)
  • Enzymes are biological molecules produced by living entities for carrying out biological processes. (preprints.org)
  • It was not possible to distinguish well-defined groups of isolates based on the bromeliad species and microhabitat they inhabit using genetic characterization by rep-PCR. (scielo.br)
  • These microorganisms are responsible to produce metabolites with biotechnological interest, such as enzymes. (unesp.br)
  • Both chemoautotrophic and photoautotrophic microorganisms obtain their energy and produce their nutrients from simple inorganic compounds such as carbon dioxide. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • It has been in use already for many decades to produce extracellular (food) enzymes and citric acid. (springer.com)
  • Utilizing lignocellulosic feedstocks to produce hyperthermophilic hydrolases provides additional benefits for ethanol production in the way of transgenic feedstocks serving as both enzyme providers and cellulosic substrates. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Once malathion is introduced into the environment, it is degraded by atmospheric photooxidation, hydrolysis, or biodegradation mediated by microorganisms found in most sediment, soils, and water. (cdc.gov)
  • This species reached an average degradation of 79.57% of the binary mixture of dyes, brilliant blue - allura red. (ac.be)
  • Yes, we can identifybacteria up to species level on culture plates.It is differential media.Differential medium -special mixture of nutrients used to determine the species specificity of the microbes and the study of their properties. (assignmentexpert.com)
  • Compounds made by a mixture of microorganisms often complement each other and work to the exclusion of unwanted microorganisms. (nzdl.org)
  • Being pre-dated by older names, the name A. niger has been conserved for economical and information retrieval reasons and there is a taxonomical consensus based on molecular data that the only other common species closely related to A. niger in the Aspergillus series Nigri is A. tubingensis . (springer.com)
  • The herbicide tolerance results from a single point mutation in the major acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS) gene such that this enzyme, the target of imidazolinone herbicides, is no longer affected by imazethapyr. (canada.ca)
  • Imidazolinone herbicides are active against the enzyme acetohydroxyacid synthase (AHAS), also known as acetolactate synthase (ALS). (canada.ca)
  • Mammalian Wax Biosynthesis II: Expression Cloning of Wax Synthase cDNAs Encoding a Member of the Acyltransferase Enzyme Family'', J Biol Chem. (wikidoc.org)
  • [ 4-6 ] The gut microbiota performs a number of crucial functions for the host including priming the immune system, breakdown of dietary substrates inaccessible to host enzymes, and detoxification of xenobiotics. (medscape.com)
  • We study the chemistry of microorganisms relevant to human health and disease, focusing mostly on the microbes that live inside the human gastrointestinal tract. (carleton.edu)
  • Different enzyme systems with particular catalytic methods have evolved in some microbes to breakdown complex lignocellulose. (pulsus.com)
  • The statistical evaluation of the most abundant genes in each group and time studied allowed us to identify the potential metabolic pathways involved in the success of the different microorganisms. (frontiersin.org)
  • A number of studies have explored how regulation of generally, and at least to a first approximation, it is obvious that metabolic pathways affects the growth rate of microorganisms, gene regulation only is useful if the environmental conditions vary both in the steady state and in response to changes in the local with time. (lu.se)
  • The genus Erythrina comprises more than 100 species, widely distributed in tropical and subtropical areas. (scialert.net)
  • Importance to other animals== Certain species of [[Demodex mite]]s feed on sebum and are commonly found in the sebaceous glands of mammals, including those of humans. (wikidoc.org)
  • So molecularly cross linked, compact and tough was this material that it was completely resistant to digestion by trypsin and other commonly available 'digestive' biological enzymes. (extropy.org)
  • At T1, the significantly more abundant enzyme-coding genes were related to threonine metabolism and those genes related to the glycolytic pathway, explained by the abundance of sugars in the medium. (frontiersin.org)
  • A very natural place to study gene detecting and metabolizing lactose, it is known that the overall regulation is in the metabolism of the cell, and then specifically in effect of expressing the lac genes in vain is a drop in the growth rate the regulation of genes that code for enzymes and transporter of as much as 5% [1,6]. (lu.se)
  • It consists of 17 pH-balanced enzymes to help digest food completely and not leave undigested food to burden and toxify the body. (healthy-living.org)
  • People over the age of 30 no longer make enough enzymes in their livers, pancreas, and stomachs and, therefore, no longer digest digest food completely. (healthy-living.org)
  • A characteristic of microorganisms is their ability to grow and form a population of organisms. (cliffsnotes.com)
  • Coagulase-negative staphylococci are gram-positive, aerobic organisms distinguished from the closely related Staphylococcus aureus by the group's inability to form coagulase, an enzyme that promotes thrombus formation via the conversion of fibrinogen into fibrin [2]. (dermnetnz.org)
  • Digestive bitters that stimulate production of gastric juices and enzymes in the stomach, liver and pancreas. (healthy-living.org)
  • In this way, many variants of any gene can be rapidly recombined, even variants from different species. (i-sis.org.uk)
  • The first phagocyte a pathogen (disease-causing microorganism) is likely to encounter is a neutrophil. (bionity.com)
  • In particular, a loss of species richness in Crohn's disease has been widely observed. (medscape.com)
  • With a minimalist model of metabolism, cell growth and transcriptional regulation in a microorganism, we explore how the interaction between environmental conditions and gene regulation set the growth rate of cells in the phase of exponential growth. (lu.se)
  • The rate of digestion (Kd of NDFd) is largely a function of species differences, lignin complexes and ratios, and maturity. (lallemandanimalnutrition.com)
  • Aggregate of microorganisms in which cells that are frequently embedded within a self-produced matrix of extracellular polymeric substances (EPSs) adhere to each other and/or to a surface. (wikipedia.org)
  • Most of these species initiate the breakdown by same reaction mechanism as cholesterol oxidase , and we have used this enzyme directly to reduce the toxicity of 7-ketocholesterol, the major toxic oxysterol , to cultured human cells. (fightaging.org)
  • Many microorganisms have mechanisms that impair antibody production by inducing suppressor cells, blocking antigen processing, and inhibiting lymphocyte mitogenesis. (msdmanuals.com)
  • This chapter also emphasizes the usage of some prominent microorganisms, their secreted enzymes and their proposed mechanisms of action involved with the degradation of the waste products. (preprints.org)
  • Agricultural residues can thus be used for the production of various value-added products, such as industrially important enzymes. (mdpi.com)
  • Production of natural and rare pentoses using microorganisms and their enzymes. (scialert.net)
  • However, tannase, an enzyme that promote esters and side bonds of hydrolyzes hydrolyzable tannins, producing glucose and gallic acid or ellagic acid, is still little explored in terms of its production by endophytic microorganisms. (unesp.br)
  • It also contains botanicals that stimulate liver and pancreas production of enzymes and stomach production of digestive juices. (healthy-living.org)
  • So, after the age of 30, when enzyme production goes down, people start to gain weight and become toxic. (healthy-living.org)
  • The lac operon of E. coli is but one example of how enzyme and transporter production can be made conditional on the presence of a nutrient to catabolize. (lu.se)
  • The rationale of these traditional uses in African traditional medicine was established by screening several species for biological activities. (scialert.net)
  • This present review aimed at assessing the ethnomedical, biological and phytochemical properties of several sub-Saharan Erythrina species studied in our laboratory and other laboratories from Africa, Asia, Europe and America. (scialert.net)
  • 1982). Expression of other CYP enzymes in fish, c17αhydroxylase, 17,20-lyase (CYP17), and aromatase (CYP19), were not affected by 7 day exposure to 30 ug/L ketoconazole (Zhang et al, 2008). (janusinfo.se)
  • Bioremediation is the process of using plants and microorganisms (or aspects of their biochemistry) to restore a damaged or polluted environment. (fightaging.org)
  • As the microorganisms responsible for the infection multiply, infection spreads along the anatomical fascial planes, often sparing the deep muscular structures and, to variable degrees, the overlying skin, making the extent of involvement difficult to appreciate. (medscape.com)
  • One of the problems, of course, is that every second of every single day, we are constantly being exposed to billions and billions of potentially harmful microorganisms with every breath we take or every bit of food that we swallow or swig of water that we drink. (jonbarron.org)
  • However, exposure to oxygen can be harmful or even fatal for these microorganisms. (pewtrusts.org)