Book Chapter10.1016/S0065-2164(08)70555-0
Lipid composition as a guide to the classification of bacteria.
302
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined lipid composition as a guide to the classification of bacteria and showed that qualitative fatty acid analyses could be used to differentiate between various organisms, such as bacteria.
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Abstract: Publisher Summary This chapter examines lipid composition as a guide to the classification of bacteria. The correlation of lipid composition with taxonomic classification showed that qualitative fatty acid analyses could be used to differentiate between various organisms. Lipids are most simply defined as the natural products that may be isolated from biological materials by extraction with organic solvents and that are usually insoluble in water. The lipids commonly found in bacteria are amphiphatic molecules, that is, they consist of distinct polar and apolar regions. The chemical composition of many bacterial components, including lipids, can be affected by a variety of external factors, such as temperature of growth, substrate composition, pH of environment, and time of harvesting. The ideal chemotaxonomic method has three basic criteria: (1) it should be applicable to as large a number of organisms as possible; (2) the required information should be readily obtained; and (3) the parameters utilized should differ as widely as possible from one genus or family to the next.
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Citations
Biochemical Measurements of Microbial Mass and Activity from Environmental Samples
TL;DR: Using the leaf-litter detrital microflora recovered after incubation in a semitropical estuary, biochemical assays of multiple components can be made which give reasonably similar estimates of microbial mass, using normalization values from bacterial monocultures.
180
Conjugation of fatty acids with different lengths modulates the antibacterial and antifungal activity of a cationic biologically inactive peptide
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TL;DR: The results reveal that the length of the aliphatic chain is sufficient to control the pathogen specificity of the lipopeptides, most probably by controlling both the overall hydrophobicity and the oligomeric state of thelipopeptide in solution.
179
Gas-liquid chromatography as an analytical tool in microbiology
TL;DR: The use of short-chain acid products and cellular fatty acid composition for identifying and classifying Pseudomonas species and other medically important gram-negative non-fermentative bacteria is illustrated and application of the flexible, fused, silica-glass, capillary column for increased resolution of bacterial fatty acids is discussed.
178
Cellular fatty acid composition of isolates from Legionnaires disease.
TL;DR: The cellular fatty acids of four isolates from Legionnaires disease and two antigenically related isolates were identified by gas chromatography, mass spectrometry, and associated techniques and had essentially the same fatty acid composition.
167
Microbial indicators of soil quality
Ronald F. Turco,Ann C. Kennedy,M. D. Jawson +2 more
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors used microbial community structure to determine the long-term effects of stress on soil quality and found that microbial diversity should include nucleic acid and fatty acid phospholipid profiles.
164
References
•Book
Structural and functional aspects of lipoproteins in living systems.
E. Tria,A. M. Scanu +1 more
- 01 Jan 1969
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