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Abstract - SpringerLink. Springer.com springerprotocols.com SpringerLink You have Guest access. What can I do as a guest? Shopping Cart Log In Biomedical and Life Sciences Archives of Microbiology Volume 151, Number 4 (1989), 314-318 , DOI: 10.1007/BF00406557 Original Papers Comparison of thermophilic methanogens from submarine hydrothermal vents W. View Related Documents Scroll up Scroll down MyCopy What are MyCopy books? MyCopy books are printed versions from the Springer eBook Collection to which your library provides you access via SpringerLink.

What is the price of a MyCopy book? Every MyCopy book is available at 24.95, including shipping and handling. Who can buy MyCopy books? MyCopy books are only available to SpringerLink users that are patrons of a participating library that owns and/or subscribes to at least one Springer eBook Subject Collection. How many MyCopy books can I order? The total number of eBooks that you may order depends on how many Springer eBook Subject Collections your library has. Pay-Per-View. Isolation and characterization of thermophilic methanogenic bacteria from mushroom compost 10.1016/0378-1097(89)90249-8 : FEMS Microbiology Letters. Diversity and ubiquity of thermophilic met... [Environ Microbiol. 2006. Introduction to the Archaea. The Domain Archaea wasn't recognized as a major domain of life until quite recently. Until the 20th century, most biologists considered all living things to be classifiable as either a plant or an animal.

But in the 1950s and 1960s, most biologists came to the realization that this system failed to accomodate the fungi, protists, and bacteria. By the 1970s, a system of Five Kingdoms had come to be accepted as the model by which all living things could be classified. At a more fundamental level, a distinction was made between the prokaryotic bacteria and the four eukaryotic kingdoms (plants, animals, fungi, & protists). The distinction recognizes the common traits that eukaryotic organisms share, such as nuclei, cytoskeletons, and internal membranes. The scientific community was understandably shocked in the late 1970s by the discovery of an entirely new group of organisms -- the Archaea.

Archaeans include inhabitants of some of the most extreme environments on the planet. Sources: T. Box 1 : Archaeal genetics [mdash] the third way : Nature Reviews Genetics. Archaeal DNA replication and repair. [Curr Opin Microbiol. 2005. Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews. Genetics. Uracil recognition by replicative DNA polymerases is limited to the archaea, not occurring with bacteria and eukarya. Probing the Interaction of Archaeal DNA Polymerases with Deaminated Bases Using X-ray Crystallography and Non-Hydrogen Bonding Isosteric Base Analogues - Biochemistry. ‡ Institute of Cell and Molecular Biosciences (ICaMB), The University of Newcastle, Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH, U.K. § Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305 Biochemistry, 2010, 49 (27), pp 5772–5781 DOI: 10.1021/bi100421r Publication Date (Web): June 8, 2010 Copyright © 2010 American Chemical Society *To whom correspondence should be addressed.

. † Funding Statement B.A.C. was supported by grants from the European Commission (MRTN-CT-2005-019566) and the UK BBSRC (BB/F00687X/1). Section: Abstract Archaeal family-B DNA polymerases stall replication on encountering the pro-mutagenic bases uracil and hypoxanthine. Citing Articles View all 10 citing articles Citation data is made available by participants in CrossRef's Cited-by Linking service. BMC Biochemistry | Full text | Identification of archaeal proteins that affect the exosome function in vitro.

Archaeal Protein Biogenesis: Posttranslational Modification and Degradation. Amazon.co. Book Description Publication Date: 1 Jun 2001 | ISBN-10: 0387987711 | ISBN-13: 978-0443056154 | Edition: 2nd ed. 2001 Bacteriologists from all levels of expertise and within all specialties rely on this Manual as one of the most comprehensive and authoritative works. Since publication of the first edition of the Systematics, the field has undergone revolutionary changes, leading to a phylogenetic classification of prokaryotes based on sequencing of the small ribosomal subunit. The list of validly named species has more than doubled since publication of the first edition, and descriptions of over 2000 new and realigned species are included in this new edition along with more in-depth ecological information about individual taxa and extensive introductory essays by leading authorities in the field.

Frequently Bought Together Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought Product Description Review From the reviews of the second edition: Sell a Digital Version of This Book in the Kindle Store. Amazon.co. Amazon.co. Amazon.co. Amazon.co. In the last 10 years, considerable information has accumulated on the biochemistry of archaea. In this volume, the subject as a whole is treated in a comprehensive manner. The book brings together recent knowledge concerning general metabolism, bioenergetics, molecular biology and genetics, membrane lipid and cell-wall structural chemistry and evolutionary relations, of the three major groups of archaea: the extreme halophiles, the extreme thermophiles and the methanogens.

Subjects included are: the evolutionary relationship of these microorganisms to all other living cells; special metabolic features of archaea; protein structural chemistry; cell envelopes; molecular biology in archaea including DNA structure and replication, transcription apparatus, translation apparatus, and ribosomal structure; and a final chapter on the molecular genetics of archaea. This comprehensive scope ensures its usefulness to researchers, and stimulates further study in this rapidly developing field. Reference Management Systems. Academic reference management software for researchers. Amazon.co. From the Back Cover Introduced by Crafoord Prize winner Carl Woese, this volume combines reviews of the major developments in archaeal research over the past 10–15 years with more specialized articles dealing with important recent breakthroughs.

Drawing on major themes presented at the June 2005 meeting held in Munich to honor the archaea pioneers Wolfram Zillig and Karl O. Stetter, the book provides a thorough survey of the field from its controversial beginnings to its ongoing expansion to include aspects of eukaryotic biology . The editors have assembled articles from the premier researchers in this rapidly burgeoning field, including an account by Carl Woese of his original discovery of the Archaea (until 1990 termed archaebacteria) and the initially mixed reactions of the scientific community. About the Author Roger A. Lme. Rannsóknarnámssjóður - Rannsóknamiðstöð Íslands.