Examples of Bacillus anthracis in the following topics:
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Anthrax
- Anthrax is a rare, infectious disease caused by Bacillus anthracis that can spread from animals to humans.
- Anthrax is an acute disease caused by the bacterium Bacillus anthracis.
- Bacillus anthracis is a rod-shaped, Gram-positive, aerobic bacterium about 1 by 9 micrometers in length.
- B.anthracis bacterial spores have been known to have reinfected animals over 70 years after burial sites of anthrax-infected animals were disturbed.
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Antibiotic Discovery
- Antibiosis was first described in 1877 in bacteria when Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch observed that an airborne bacillus could inhibit the growth of Bacillus anthracis.
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Bacterial Pneumonias
- Other important Gram-positive causes of pneumonia are Staphylococcus aureus and Bacillus anthracis.
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Endospores
- Examples of bacteria that can form endospores include Bacillus and Clostridium.
- Bacteria having a centrally placed endospore include Bacillus cereus, and those having a subterminal endospore include Bacillus subtilis.
- As a simplified model for cellular differentiation, the molecular details of endospore formation have been extensively studied, specifically in the model organism Bacillus subtilis.
- Endospores of the bacterium Bacillus anthracis were used in the 2001 anthrax attacks.
- A stained preparation of Bacillus subtilis showing endospores as green and the vegetative cell as red.
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History of Microbiology: Hooke, van Leeuwenhoek, and Cohn
- Among other things Cohn is remembered for being the first to show that Bacillus can change from a vegetative state to an endospore state when subjected to an environment deleterious to the vegetative state.
- He found that the blood of cattle who were infected with anthrax always had large numbers of Bacillus anthracis.
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Siderophores
- For example, the anthrax pathogen Bacillus anthracis releases two siderophores, bacillibactin and petrobactin, to scavenge ferric iron from iron proteins.
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Sporulation in Bacillus
- Bacillus subtilis is a rod-shaped, Gram-postive bacteria that is naturally found in soil and vegetation.
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Koch and Pure Culture
- After Casimir Davaine demonstrated the direct transmission of the anthrax bacillus between cows, Koch studied anthrax more closely.
- He invented methods to purify the bacillus from blood samples and grow pure cultures.
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Relative Resistance of Microbes
- A stained preparation of Bacillus subtilis showing endospores as green and the vegetative cell as red.
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Glycocalyx
- ., polypeptide in B. anthracis).