521 research outputs found
Tropodithietic acid producing bacteria – A novel tool for improving food safety of molluscan shellfish?
Subinhibitory concentrations of antibiotics affect biofilm formation in Listeria monocytogenes
Sublethal Concentrations Of Antibiotics Cause Shift To Anaerobic Metabolism In Listeria Monocytogenes And Induce Phenotypes Linked To Antibiotic Tolerance
Draft Genome Sequence of <i>Photobacterium halotolerans</i> S2753, Producer of Bioactive Secondary Metabolites
We report here the whole draft genome sequence of marine isolate Photobacterium halotolerans S2753, which produces the known antibiotic holomycin and also ngercheumicins and solonamides A and B, which interfere with virulence of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus strains by interacting with the quorum-sensing system
Phaeobacter gallaeciensis cell-to-cell signalling does not influence antagonism in algae cultures
The Small Colony Variant Of <i>Listeria Monocytogenes</i> Is More Tolerant To Antibiotics And Grows Better Within Caco-2 Epithelial Cells Than The Wild Type
Monitoring and managing microbes in aquaculture - Towards a sustainable industry
Microorganisms are of great importance to aquaculture where they occur naturally, and can be added artificially, fulfilling different roles. They recycle nutrients, degrade organic matter and, occasionally, they infect and kill the fish, their larvae or the live feed. Also, some microorganisms may protect fish and larvae against disease. Hence, monitoring and manipulating the microbial communities in aquaculture environments hold great potential; both in terms of assessing and improving water quality, but also in terms of controlling the development of microbial infections. Using microbial communities to monitor water quality and to efficiently carry out ecosystem services within the aquaculture systems may only be a few years away. Initially, however, we need to thoroughly understand the microbiomes of both healthy and diseased aquaculture systems, and we need to determine how to successfully manipulate and engineer these microbiomes. Similarly, we can reduce the need to apply antibiotics in aquaculture through manipulation of the microbiome, i.e. by the use of probiotic bacteria. Recent studies have demonstrated that fish pathogenic bacteria in live feed can be controlled by probiotics and that mortality of infected fish larvae can be reduced significantly by probiotic bacteria. However, the successful management of the aquaculture microbiota is currently hampered by our lack of knowledge of relevant microbial interactions and the overall ecology of these systems
- …
