Community Genomics Among Stratified Microbial Assemblages in the Ocean's Interior
暂无分享,去创建一个
E. Delong | S. Hallam | S. Chisholm | R. Edwards | Beltran Rodriguez Brito | M. Sullivan | C. Preston | D. Karl | V. Rich | T. Mincer | N. Frigaard | Asunción Martínez
[1] Tatiana Tatusova,et al. NCBI Reference Sequence (RefSeq): a curated non-redundant sequence database of genomes, transcripts and proteins , 2004, Nucleic Acids Res..
[2] Naryttza N. Diaz,et al. The Subsystems Approach to Genome Annotation and its Use in the Project to Annotate 1000 Genomes , 2005, Nucleic acids research.
[3] E. Delong,et al. Genomic perspectives in microbial oceanography , 2005, Nature.
[4] C. Suttle,et al. Marine T4-type bacteriophages, a ubiquitous component of the dark matter of the biosphere. , 2005, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[5] Joaquín Dopazo,et al. PupasView: a visual tool for selecting suitable SNPs, with putative pathological effect in genes, for genotyping purposes , 2005, Nucleic Acids Res..
[6] Maureen L. Coleman,et al. Three Prochlorococcus Cyanophage Genomes: Signature Features and Ecological Interpretations , 2005, PLoS biology.
[7] S. Tringe,et al. Comparative Metagenomics of Microbial Communities , 2004, Science.
[8] J. Handelsman. Metagenomics: Application of Genomics to Uncultured Microorganisms , 2004, Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
[9] Daniel Rokhsar,et al. Reverse Methanogenesis: Testing the Hypothesis with Environmental Genomics , 2004, Science.
[10] Andrew C. Tolonen,et al. Transfer of photosynthesis genes to and from Prochlorococcus viruses. , 2004, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[11] Forest Rohwer,et al. Global distribution of nearly identical phage-encoded DNA sequences. , 2004, FEMS microbiology letters.
[12] C. Woese. A New Biology for a New Century , 2004, Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
[13] S. Giovannoni,et al. Prevalence of the Chloroflexi-Related SAR202 Bacterioplankton Cluster throughout the Mesopelagic Zone and Deep Ocean , 2004, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[14] M. Weinbauer. Ecology of prokaryotic viruses. , 2004, FEMS microbiology reviews.
[15] O. White,et al. Environmental Genome Shotgun Sequencing of the Sargasso Sea , 2004, Science.
[16] J. Banfield,et al. Community structure and metabolism through reconstruction of microbial genomes from the environment , 2004, Nature.
[17] R. Bidigare,et al. Light driven seasonal patterns of chlorophyll and nitrate in the lower euphotic zone of the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre , 2004 .
[18] Susumu Goto,et al. The KEGG resource for deciphering the genome , 2004, Nucleic Acids Res..
[19] S. Giovannoni,et al. The uncultured microbial majority. , 2003, Annual review of microbiology.
[20] Darren A. Natale,et al. The COG database: an updated version includes eukaryotes , 2003, BMC Bioinformatics.
[21] Sallie W. Chisholm,et al. Cyanophages infecting the oceanic cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus , 2003, Nature.
[22] Manesh Shah,et al. Genome divergence in two Prochlorococcus ecotypes reflects oceanic niche differentiation , 2003, Nature.
[23] M. Weinbauer,et al. Lysogeny and virus‐induced mortality of bacterioplankton in surface, deep, and anoxic marine waters , 2003 .
[24] E. Delong,et al. Comparison of Fluorescently Labeled Oligonucleotide and Polynucleotide Probes for the Detection of Pelagic Marine Bacteria and Archaea , 2002, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[25] R. Amann,et al. Closely related Prochlorococcus genotypes show remarkably different depth distributions in two oceanic regions as revealed by in situ hybridization using 16S rRNA-targeted oligonucleotides. , 2001, Microbiology.
[26] R. Wachter,et al. Oceanic 18S rDNA sequences from picoplankton reveal unsuspected eukaryotic diversity , 2001, Nature.
[27] E. Delong,et al. Archaeal dominance in the mesopelagic zone of the Pacific Ocean , 2001, Nature.
[28] R. Bidigare,et al. Long-term changes in plankton community structure and productivity in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre: The domain shift hypothesis , 2001 .
[29] E. Koonin,et al. Construction and analysis of bacterial artificial chromosome libraries from a marine microbial assemblage. , 2000, Environmental microbiology.
[30] Christina M. Preston,et al. Visualization and Enumeration of Marine Planktonic Archaea and Bacteria by Using Polyribonucleotide Probes and Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization , 1999, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[31] Farooq Azam,et al. Microbial Control of Oceanic Carbon Flux: The Plot Thickens , 1998, Science.
[32] N. Pace. A molecular view of microbial diversity and the biosphere. , 1997, Science.
[33] N. Pace,et al. Perspectives on archaeal diversity, thermophily and monophyly from environmental rRNA sequences. , 1996, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[34] David M. Karl,et al. The Hawaii Ocean Time-series (HOT) program: Background, rationale and field implementation , 1996 .
[35] A. Yayanos,et al. Microbiology to 10,500 meters in the deep sea. , 1995, Annual review of microbiology.
[36] John B. Waterbury,et al. Resistance to Co-Occurring Phages Enables Marine Synechococcus Communities To Coexist with Cyanophages Abundant in Seawater , 1993, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[37] E. Delong. Archaea in coastal marine environments. , 1992, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[38] A. Davis. Novel major archaebacterial group from marine plankton , 1992, Nature.
[39] E. Myers,et al. Basic local alignment search tool. , 1990, Journal of molecular biology.