desiccation
(noun)
the state of drying
Examples of desiccation in the following topics:
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Desiccation
- Desiccation is the state of extreme dryness, or the process of extreme drying and can be used to control microbial growth.
- Desiccation is the state of extreme dryness, or the process of extreme drying.
- In biology and ecology, desiccation refers to the drying out of a living organism.
- After the addition of water, the bacteria will start growing again, so desiccation does not provide complete sterilization.
- Some bacteria, such as Deinococcus radiodurans and Mycobacterium, are extremely resistant to damage from prolonged desiccation while others, such as Neisseria gonorrhoeae, can survive only short periods of desiccation.
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Glycocalyx
- Capsules also contain water which protects bacteria against desiccation.
- The function of the slime layer is to protect the bacteria cells from environmental dangers such as antibiotics and desiccation.
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Firmicutes
- Many Firmicutes produce endospores, which are resistant to desiccation and can survive extreme conditions.
- They can survive without nutrients and are resistant to ultraviolet radiation, desiccation, high temperature, extreme freezing and chemical disinfectants.
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Extremely Halophilic Archaea
- Most halophilic organisms cope with the high concentrations of salt by expending energy to exclude salt from their cytoplasm to avoid protein aggregation, or "salting out. " "Normal" organisms would desiccate in these conditions, losing water via osmosis out of the cytoplasm.
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Sporulation in Bacillus
- B. subtilis can divide symmetrically to make two daughter cells (binary fission), or asymmetrically, producing a single endospore that is resistant to environmental factors such as heat, desiccation, radiation, and chemical insult which can persist in the environment for long periods of time.
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Endospores
- They are resistant to ultraviolet radiation, desiccation, high temperature, extreme freezing and chemical disinfectants.
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Deinococcus and Thermus
- It is extremely resistant to ionizing radiation, ultraviolet light, desiccation, and oxidizing and electrophilic agents.
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Non-Spore-Forming Firmicutes
- Many Firmicutes produce endospores, which are resistant to desiccation and can survive extreme conditions.
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Nongenetic Categories for Medicine and Ecology
- Xerophile: an organism that can grow in extremely dry, desiccating conditions; exemplified by the soil microbes of the Atacama Desert