Superhydrophobicity is a well-known wetting phenomenon found in numerous plants and insects. It is achieved by the combination of the surface's chemical properties and its surface roughness. Inspired by nature, numerous synthetic superhydrophobic surfaces have been developed for various applications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClostridium thermocellum efficiently degrades crystalline cellulose by a high molecular weight protein complex, the cellulosome. The bacterium regulates its cellulosomal genes using a unique extracellular biomass-sensing mechanism that involves alternative sigma factors and extracellular carbohydrate-binding modules attached to intracellular anti-sigma domains. In this study, we identified three cellulosomal xylanase genes that are regulated by the σ(I6)/RsgI6 system by utilizing sigI6 and rsgI6 knockout mutants together with primer extension analysis.
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