Advances in Microbial Physiology
Advances in Microbial Physiology Series

Coordinator: Poole Robert K.

Language: English

142.17 €

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196 p. · 15x22.8 cm · Hardback

Advances in Microbial Physiology, Volume 76, the latest release in this ongoing series, continues the long tradition of topical, important, cutting-edge reviews in microbiology. The updated release contains updates in the field, with comprehensive chapters covering Bacteria respiration during infection, Spironucleus vortens: functional imaging of a model aerotolerant flagellated protist, In situ Absorbance Measurements: a New Means to Study Respiratory Electron Transfer in Chemolithotrophic microorganisms, Microbubbles in microbiology, Bacterial catabolism of s-triazine herbicides: biochemistry, evolution and application, and more.

  1. Making iron-sulfur clusters: structure, regulation and evolution of the bacterial ISC system
  2. Corentin Baussier, Soufyan Fakroun, Corinne Aubert, Sarah Dubrac, Pierre Mandin, Béatrice Py, and Frédéric Barras

  3. Functional imaging of a model unicell: Spironucleus vortens as an anaerobic but aerotolerant flagellated protist
  4. David Lloyd, Coralie O. Millet, Catrin F. Williams, Anthony J. Hayes, Simon J.A. Pope, Iestyn Pope, Paola Borri, Wolfgang Langbein, Lars Folke Olsen, Marc D. Isaacs, and Anita Lunding

  5. In situ absorbance measurements: a new means to study respiratory electron transfer in chemolithotrophic microorganisms
  6. Robert C. Blake, II and Richard A. White, III

  7. Bacterial catabolism of s-triazine herbicides: biochemistry, evolution and application

Lygie Esquirol, Thomas S. Peat, Elena Sugrue, Sahil Balotra, Sarah Rottet, Andrew C. Warden, Matthew Wilding, Carol J. Hartley, Colin J. Jackson, Janet Newman and Colin Scott

Microbiologists, biochemists, biotechnologists, and those interested in physiology, microbial biochemistry and its applications.
Professor Robert Poole is West Riding Professor of Microbiology at the University of Sheffield. He has >35 years’ experience of bacterial physiology and bioenergetics, in particular O2-, CO- and NO-reactive proteins, and has published >300 papers (h=48, 2013). He was Chairman of the Plant and Microbial Sciences Committee of the UK Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council and has held numerous grants from BBSRC, the Wellcome and Leverhulme Trusts and the EC. He coordinates an international SysMO systems biology consortium. He published pioneering studies of bacterial oxidases and globins and discovered the bacterial flavohaemoglobin gene (hmp) and its function in NO detoxification He recently published the first systems analyses of responses of bacteria to novel carbon monoxide-releasing molecules (CORMs) and is a world leader in NO, CO and CORM research.
  • Contains contributions from leading authorities in microbial physiology
  • Informs and updates on all the latest developments in the field of microbial physiology