Transporter genes expressed by coastal bacterioplankton in response to dissolved organic carbon
暂无分享,去创建一个
Mary Ann Moran | Shulei Sun | M. Moran | Rachel Poretsky | Rachel S Poretsky | Shulei Sun | Xiaozhen Mou | Xiaozhen Mou
[1] M. Moran,et al. Bacterioplankton assemblages transforming dissolved organic compounds in coastal seawater. , 2007, Environmental microbiology.
[2] Forest Rohwer,et al. An application of statistics to comparative metagenomics , 2006, BMC Bioinformatics.
[3] P. Raymond,et al. Bacterial consumption of DOC during transport through a temperate estuary , 2000 .
[4] S. Joye,et al. Nutrient-Replete Benthic Microalgae as a Source of Dissolved Organic Carbon to Coastal Waters , 2008 .
[5] R. Sleighter,et al. Molecular characterization of dissolved organic matter (DOM) along a river to ocean transect of the lower Chesapeake Bay by ultrahigh resolution electrospray ionization Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry , 2008 .
[6] W. Donachie,et al. Growth of the Bacterial Cell , 1970, Nature.
[7] R. Benner,et al. What happens to terrestrial organic matter in the ocean , 2004 .
[8] R. Benner,et al. Bacterial utilization of different size classes of dissolved organic matter , 1996 .
[9] Cindy Lee,et al. Seasonal cycling of putrescine and amino acids in relation to biological production in a stratified coastal salt pond , 1995 .
[10] S. Dudoit,et al. Normalization for cDNA microarray data: a robust composite method addressing single and multiple slide systematic variation. , 2002, Nucleic acids research.
[11] Alexander F. Auch,et al. MEGAN analysis of metagenomic data. , 2007, Genome research.
[12] M. Höfle. Degradation of Putrescine and Cadaverine in Seawater Cultures by Marine Bacteria , 1984, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[13] Robert A. Edwards,et al. Bacterial carbon processing by generalist species in the coastal ocean , 2008, Nature.
[14] J. Pakulski. The release of reducing sugars and dissolved organic carbon from Spartina alterniflora Loisel in a Georgia salt marsh , 1986 .
[15] M. Moran,et al. Role of photoreactions in the formation of biologically labile compounds from dissolved organic matter , 1997 .
[16] J. Fuhrman,et al. Microbial Desulfurization of a Crude Oil Middle-Distillate Fraction: Analysis of the Extent of Sulfur Removal and the Effect of Removal on Remaining Sulfur , 1999, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[17] E. M. Thurman,et al. Organic Geochemistry of Natural Waters , 1985, Developments in Biogeochemistry.
[18] S. Giovannoni,et al. Molecular diversity and ecology of microbial plankton , 2005, Nature.
[19] J. Pernthaler,et al. Roseobacter and SAR11 dominate microbial glucose uptake in coastal North Sea waters. , 2006, Environmental microbiology.
[20] Mary Ann Moran,et al. Comparative day/night metatranscriptomic analysis of microbial communities in the North Pacific subtropical gyre. , 2009, Environmental microbiology.
[21] R. Wiegert,et al. The Ecology of a Salt Marsh , 1981, Ecological Studies.
[22] R. Hodson,et al. Contributions of degrading Spartina alterniflora lignocellulose to the dissolved organic carbon pool of a salt marsh , 1990 .
[23] R. Benner,et al. Distribution and cycling of terrigenous dissolved organic matter in the ocean , 1997, Nature.
[24] G. Chin-Leo,et al. Unbalanced growth in natural assemblages of marine bacterioplankton , 1990 .
[25] R. Koschel,et al. Primary Production , 2021, Tropical Marine Ecology.
[26] J. A. Hellebust,et al. EXCRETION OF SOME ORGANIC COMPOUNDS BY MARINE PHYTOPLANKTON1 , 1965 .
[27] N. Sauer,et al. Glucose induces two amino acid transport systems in Chlorella. , 1981, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[28] R. T. Wright,et al. Measurement and Significance of Specific Activity in the Heterotrophic Bacteria of Natural Waters , 1978, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[29] M. Cottrell,et al. Natural Assemblages of Marine Proteobacteria and Members of the Cytophaga-Flavobacter Cluster Consuming Low- and High-Molecular-Weight Dissolved Organic Matter , 2000, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[30] J. Bauer,et al. Bacterial utilization of transient plankton-derived dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen inputs in surface ocean waters , 2004 .
[31] I. Koike,et al. Production of Refractory Dissolved Organic Matter by Bacteria , 2001, Science.
[32] D. Kirchman. 9 – The Contribution of Monomers and other Low-Molecular Weight Compounds to the Flux of Dissolved Organic Material in Aquatic Ecosystems , 2003 .
[33] B. Fuchs,et al. Differential microbial uptake of dissolved amino acids and amino sugars in surface waters of the Atlantic Ocean , 2007 .
[34] P. Hatcher,et al. Advanced instrumental approaches for characterization of marine dissolved organic matter: extraction techniques, mass spectrometry, and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy. , 2007, Chemical reviews.
[35] R. Malmstrom,et al. Biomass Production and Assimilation of Dissolved Organic Matter by SAR11 Bacteria in the Northwest Atlantic Ocean , 2005, Applied and Environmental Microbiology.
[36] R. Benner. Chapter 3 – Chemical Composition and Reactivity , 2002 .
[37] H. Ducklow,et al. High turnover rates of dissolved organic carbon during a spring phytoplankton bloom , 1991, Nature.
[38] D. Kirchman,et al. Dynamics and molecular composition of dissolved organic material during experimental phytoplankton blooms , 2001 .
[39] I. G. Bravo,et al. N‐Acetylneuraminic acid uptake in Pasteurella (Mannheimia) haemolytica A2 occurs by an inducible and specific transport system , 2001, FEBS letters.
[40] R. Kiene,et al. New and important roles for DMSP in marine microbial communities , 2000 .
[41] Gene W. Tyson,et al. Metatranscriptomics reveals unique microbial small RNAs in the ocean’s water column , 2009, Nature.
[42] S. Bertilsson,et al. Photochemically produced carboxylic acids as substrates for freshwater bacterioplankton> , 1998 .