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Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: bacteria + 304,000 + good  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)


News Virginian
Bacteria Scare Has Augusta Camp Staying Sanitary
NBC 29 News, VA -
An Augusta County Boy Scout camp is working to prevent a bacteria scare after an E. coli outbreak caused the closure of a camp in Rockbridge County last ...
Swoope Scout camp takes steps to avoid food contamination News Virginian
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Camp Shenandoah Reinforces Policies WHSV
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Adelaide scientist finds bacteria that eats polluted soil
NEWS.com.au, Australia - Aug 3, 2008
AN ADELAIDE scientist has discovered a natural bacteria that destroys cancer-causing chemicals in contaminated soil. University of South Australia Professor ...
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Beneficial bacteria
Ottawa Citizen,  Canada - Aug 4, 2008
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Mother Jones
Bacteria Not Flu Killed Most In 1918
Mother Jones, CA -
A new study in Emerging Infectious Diseases concludes that bacteria not influenza killed most people in the 1918 flu epidemic. ...
The search for the source of Erie County beach bacteria
Sandusky Register,  USA - 57 minutes ago
By TOM JACKSON | Monday August 04 2008, 3:44pm When the rains fall in Erie County, the water runs downhill into Sandusky Bay and into Lake Erie. ...
OK, everybody out of the water
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Source: Google News

Rapid glia expression and release of proinflammatory cytokines in experimental Klebsiella pneumoniae … -
LL Wen, CT Chiu, YN Huang, CF Chang, JY Wang - Experimental Neurology, 2007 - Elsevier
... A good part of the tissue damage responsible for ... with a Cytokine Reagent Kit
(#171-304000; Bio-Rad ... Attenuation of bacteria-induced inflammation early in the ...

GROWTH OF CELL SUSPENSIONS IN TISSUE CULTURE -
WR Earle, JC Bryant, EL Schilling, VJ Evans - Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1955 - Blackwell Synergy
... was finally traced down to bacteria growing through the cotton-packed gas filters
guarding the gas inlet and outlet of the culture flask. ... 671 304000 200.000 ...

Mating disruption as a method of suppressing pink bollworm (Lepidoptera, Gelechiidae) and tobacco … -
TJ Henneberry, JM Gillespie, LA Bariola, HM Flint, … - Insect Suppression with Controlled Release Pheromone Systems, 1982 - fao.org
... The results showed that jujube fruits in polyethylene bags with holes were still
in good condition after 16 and 24 days in storage of 5 degrees Centigrade an ...

Chromatographic separation and kinetic properties of fructosyltransferase from Aureobasidium …
M Anto?ov?, V Illeov?, M Vand?kov?, A Dru?kovsk?, … - Journal of Biotechnology, 2008 - Elsevier
... ATCC 20524 ranged from 304000 to 346000 (Hayashi et ... 5 shows a good agreement between
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The Thai environment: prospering or suffering from development? -
LB Reuterglrdh, NT Yen - Trends in Analytical Chemistry, 1997 - Elsevier
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[PDF] 1.1 The Smallpox Disease
V Major, V Minor - cseserv.engr.scu.edu
... inevitably contains some bacteria, but properly prepared, the number of bacteria
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EDUCATION DAY -
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... rich plasma method traditionally used in the US, of viral inactivation procedures
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Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Trillions of good bacteria help you to be who you are

So you think you are the self-reliant type.

 

A rugged individualist.

Well, give it up. You'd be nothing without the trillions of microbial minions toiling in your large intestine, performing crucial physiological functions that your highfalutin' human cells wouldn't have a clue how to do.

That's one of the humbling truths emerging from the most thorough census yet of the bacterial tenants homesteading in our bodies. The new view, made possible by cutting-edge DNA screening methods, shows that the vaunted human genome - all the genes in our cells - is but a fraction of what it takes to make a human.

In fact, it's time to stop thinking of yourself as a single living thing at all, say the scientists behind the new work. Better to see yourself as a "super-organism," they say: a hybrid creature consisting of about 10% human cells and 90% bacterial cells.

"The numbers might strike fear into people, but the overall concept is one we have to understand and adjust to," said Steven Gill, a microbial geneticist who helped lead the study at the Institute for Genomic Research in Rockville, Md.

A better understanding of the bacteria colonizing our bodies could have far-reaching medical implications. In the not-too-distant future, Gill and others predicted, doctors will test for subtle changes in the numbers and kinds of microbes in people's guts as early indicators of disease. Doctors may prescribe live bacterial supplements to bring certain physiological measures back into normal range. And drug companies will invent compounds that mimic or amplify the actions of helpful bacteria.

"These microbes are master physiological chemists," said Jeffrey I. Gordon of Washington University in St. Louis, another team member. "Understanding their biosynthetic capabilities and following the pathways by which they operate could be the starting point for a 21st-century pharmacopoeia."

Three pounds of bacteria

Scientists have long recognized that the number of human cells in the body is dwarfed by the 100 trillion or so bacteria living in and on it. It's a daunting reality obscured by the fact that human cells are much bigger than bacterial cells. For all their numbers, bacteria account for only about three pounds of the average person's weight.

Just how important those three pounds are, however, has been difficult to appreciate until now. Most bacteria are too finicky to grow in laboratory dishes. As a result, little was known about who these majority shareholders really are and what, exactly, they are doing to and for us.

The new study, described in a recent issue of the journal Science, took a novel approach. Rather than struggling to grow the body's myriad microbes and testing their ability to perform various biochemical reactions - the methods scientists traditionally use to classify bacteria - the team used tiny molecular probes resembling DNA Velcro to retrieve tens of thousands of snippets of bacterial DNA from smidgens of the intestinal output of two volunteers.

By comparing the DNA sequences of those snippets with those of previously studied bacteria, the team was able to sort many of the invisible bugs into known families.

Hundreds of others, it became clear, belong to microbial families unknown to science until now.

Crucial work

But the team members went further. By comparing the genetic puzzle pieces with similar sequences stored in databases, they were able to determine what biological functions many of these microbes are performing in the gut. And, as it turns out, no small number of those functions are crucial to human survival.

Some of the bacteria have the genetic machinery to make essential vitamins that are not found in the diet and that human cells can barely manufacture, including several B vitamins. Others make enzymes that can break the chemical bonds in plant fibers, or polysaccharides, where a plant's nutritional energy is stored.

"We have very few of those linkage-busting enzymes encoded in our own genome, but these microbial genomes have a whole arsenal of gene products to degrade plant polysaccharides to energy," Gordon said.

Some bacteria in the gut break down flavonoids and other chemicals made by plants that could cause cancer or other illnesses if they were not neutralized in the intestines.

Others have the genetic capacity to scavenge hydrogen gas from the gut - a byproduct of digestion that can kill helpful bacteria - and convert it into methane. That makes the intestines a more biologically friendly place, while contributing in sometimes embarrassing moments to Earth's accumulation of greenhouse gases.

And in one especially touching example, bacteria in the gut make generous quantities of an enzyme that facilitates the production of butyryl coenzyme A, a fatty acid that is a favorite food of the cells that line the colon.

"We provide them a great place to live," study author David A. Relman of Stanford University said of the bacterial cells, "and they are feeding the lining of our gut."

 
 
 
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