Measurement of Ice Nucleation-Active Bacteria on Plants and in Precipitation by Quantitative PCR
暂无分享,去创建一个
Paul J. DeMott | Dimitrios G. Georgakopoulos | Gary D. Franc | T. Hill | B. Moffett | P. DeMott | G. Franc | D. Georgakopoulos | Thomas C. J. Hill | Bruce F. Moffett | William L. Stump | W. Stump
[1] S. Lindow,et al. Distribution of ice nucleation-active bacteria on plants in nature , 1978, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[2] B. Christner. Cloudy with a Chance of Microbes: Terrestrial microbes swept into clouds can catalyze the freezing of water and may influence precipitation on a global scale , 2012 .
[3] S. S. Hirano,et al. Bacteria in the Leaf Ecosystem with Emphasis onPseudomonas syringae—a Pathogen, Ice Nucleus, and Epiphyte , 2000, Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews.
[4] R. E. Lee,et al. Isolation of ice-nucleating active bacteria from the freeze-tolerant frog, Rana sylvatica. , 1995, Cryobiology.
[5] L R Maki,et al. Ice Nucleation Induced by Pseudomonas syringae , 1974, Applied microbiology.
[6] S. S. Hirano,et al. Atmospheric dispersal of ice nucleation-active Bacteria : the role of rain , 1990 .
[7] Rob Knight,et al. Spatial variability in airborne bacterial communities across land-use types and their relationship to the bacterial communities of potential source environments , 2011, The ISME Journal.
[8] I. Zawadzki,et al. Biogenic and anthropogenic sources of ice-forming nuclei : A review , 1997 .
[9] Effect of Plant Species and Environmental Conditions on Ice Nucleation Activity of Pseudomonas syringae on Leaves , 1988, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[10] C. Morris,et al. Biological residues define the ice nucleation properties of soil dust , 2011 .
[11] P. Amato,et al. Microorganisms isolated from the water phase of tropospheric clouds at the Puy de Dôme: major groups and growth abilities at low temperatures. , 2007, FEMS microbiology ecology.
[12] M. Schnaiter,et al. Heterogeneous ice nucleation activity of bacteria: new laboratory experiments at simulated cloud conditions , 2008 .
[13] M. Lawrence,et al. Bacteria in the global atmosphere – Part 1: Review and synthesis of literature data for different ecosystems , 2009 .
[14] D. Sands,et al. Epiphytic populations of Pseudomonas syringae on barley. , 1992, Canadian journal of microbiology.
[15] C. Upper,et al. Plants as Sources of Airborne Bacteria, Including Ice Nucleation-Active Bacteria , 1982, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[16] S. Rutherford,et al. Identification of Ice-Nucleating Active Pseudomonas fluorescens Strains for Biological Control of Overwintering Colorado Potato Beetles (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) , 2000, Journal of economic entomology.
[17] P. Solomon,et al. Biogeography in the air: fungal diversity over land and oceans , 2011 .
[18] C. Morris,et al. Inferring the Evolutionary History of the Plant Pathogen Pseudomonas syringae from Its Biogeography in Headwaters of Rivers in North America, Europe, and New Zealand , 2010, mBio.
[19] R. Fall,et al. Kinetics of appearance and disappearance of classes of bacterial ice nuclei support an aggregation model for ice nucleus assembly , 1993, Journal of bacteriology.
[20] P. Wolber,et al. Conserved repeats in diverged ice nucleation structural genes from two species of Pseudomonas. , 1986, Nucleic acids research.
[21] G. Warren,et al. The consensus sequence of ice nucleation proteins from Erwinia herbicola, Pseudomonas fluorescens and Pseudomonas syringae. , 1989, Gene.
[22] P. Amato,et al. Effects of atmospheric conditions on ice nucleation activity of Pseudomonas , 2012 .
[23] S. Lindow,et al. Relationship of total viable and culturable cells in epiphytic populations of Pseudomonas syringae , 1992, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[24] S. Roos,et al. Biochemical characterization and identification of ice-nucleation-active (INA) willow pathogens by means of BIOLOG® MicroPlate, INA gene primers and PCR-based 16S rRNA-gene analyses , 2006 .
[25] Michael Zuker,et al. Mfold web server for nucleic acid folding and hybridization prediction , 2003, Nucleic Acids Res..
[26] S. Burrows,et al. How important is biological ice nucleation in clouds on a global scale? , 2010 .
[27] G. Vali. Freezing Nucleus Content of Hail and Rain in NE Colorado , 1977 .
[28] Gabor Vali,et al. Biogenic Ice Nuclei. Part II: Bacterial Sources , 1976 .
[29] S. Mossop. Production of secondary ice particles during the growth of graupel by riming , 1976 .
[30] S. Kreidenweis,et al. Biological ice nuclei and the impact of rain on ice nuclei populations , 2013 .
[31] T. Lenton,et al. Spora and Gaia: how microbes fly with their clouds , 1998 .
[32] L. Kozloff,et al. Three separate classes of bacterial ice nucleation structures , 1990, Journal of bacteriology.
[33] R. Fall,et al. High-level expression of ice nuclei in a Pseudomonas syringae strain is induced by nutrient limitation and low temperature , 1993, Journal of bacteriology.
[34] David C. Sands,et al. Ubiquity of Biological Ice Nucleators in Snowfall , 2008, Science.
[35] R. Colwell,et al. Effect of aerosolization on culturability and viability of gram-negative bacteria , 1997, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[36] M. Skidmore,et al. Geographic, seasonal, and precipitation chemistry influence on the abundance and activity of biological ice nucleators in rain and snow , 2008, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
[37] S. S. Hirano,et al. Lognormal Distribution of Epiphytic Bacterial Populations on Leaf Surfaces , 1982, Applied and environmental microbiology.
[38] S. Kreidenweis,et al. Biogenic ice nuclei in boundary layer air over two U.S. High Plains agricultural regions , 2012 .
[39] S. Lindow,et al. Xanthomonas campestris pv. translucens strains active in ice nucleation , 1987 .
[40] S. S. Hirano,et al. Ice nucleation temperature of individual leaves in relation to population sizes of ice nucleation active bacteria and frost injury. , 1985, Plant physiology.
[41] C. Morris,et al. Ice nucleation active bacteria and their potential role in precipitation , 2004 .
[42] S. Lindow,et al. Localization of ice nucleation activity and the iceC gene product in Pseudomonas syringae and Escherichia coli. , 1989, Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI.
[43] R. Jaenicke,et al. Primary biological aerosol particles in the atmosphere: a review , 2012 .
[44] G. Vali. Quantitative Evaluation of Experimental Results an the Heterogeneous Freezing Nucleation of Supercooled Liquids , 1971 .
[45] G. Vali,et al. Atmospheric Ice Nuclei from Decomposing Vegetation , 1972, Nature.
[46] S. Frackman,et al. Betaine and DMSO : Enhancing Agents for PCR , 2003 .
[47] G. Vali,et al. Biogenic Ice Nuclei: Part I. Terrestrial and Marine Sources , 1976 .
[48] S. Lindow,et al. Size of bacterial ice-nucleation sites measured in situ by radiation inactivation analysis. , 1988, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.
[49] P. Ariya,et al. Microbiology and atmospheric processes: biological, physical and chemical characterization of aerosol particles , 2008 .
[50] J. Hallett,et al. Ice Crystal Concentration in Cumulus Clouds: Influence of the Drop Spectrum , 1974, Science.
[51] M. Shahid Mukhtar,et al. Dynamic Evolution of Pathogenicity Revealed by Sequencing and Comparative Genomics of 19 Pseudomonas syringae Isolates , 2011, PLoS pathogens.
[52] Paul J. DeMott,et al. An Empirical Parameterization of Heterogeneous Ice Nucleation for Multiple Chemical Species of Aerosol , 2008 .
[53] C. Morris,et al. The life history of the plant pathogen Pseudomonas syringae is linked to the water cycle , 2008, The ISME Journal.
[54] William R. Taylor,et al. The rapid generation of mutation data matrices from protein sequences , 1992, Comput. Appl. Biosci..
[55] L. Maki,et al. Bacteria as Biogenic Sources of Freezing Nuclei , 1978 .
[56] Fluorescent pseudomonads isolated from Hebridean cloud and rain water produce biosurfactants but do not cause ice nucleation , 2007 .
[57] M. Nei,et al. MEGA5: molecular evolutionary genetics analysis using maximum likelihood, evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods. , 2011, Molecular biology and evolution.
[58] S. Kreidenweis,et al. The impact of rain on ice nuclei populations at a forested site in Colorado , 2013 .
[59] A. Prenni,et al. New Directions: Need for defining the numbers and sources of biological aerosols acting as ice nuclei , 2010 .
[60] R. Fall,et al. Release of cell-free ice nuclei by Erwinia herbicola , 1986, Journal of bacteriology.
[61] P. Amato,et al. A short overview of the microbial population in clouds: Potential roles in atmospheric chemistry and nucleation processes , 2010 .
[62] Jeff Mellen,et al. High-Throughput Droplet Digital PCR System for Absolute Quantitation of DNA Copy Number , 2011, Analytical chemistry.
[63] G. Vali,et al. Microbiology and atmospheric processes: the role of biological particles in cloud physics , 2007 .
[64] J. Hallett,et al. Production of secondary ice particles during the riming process , 1974, Nature.