2 results match your criteria: "Center of Astrobiology (CSIC-INTA)[Affiliation]"

Antifouling activity in some benthic Antarctic invertebrates by "in situ" experiments at Deception Island, Antarctica.

Mar Environ Res

April 2015

Department of Animal Biology (Invertebrates), Faculty of Biology, University of Barcelona, Diagonal, 643, 08028 Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain; Biodiversity Research Institute (IrBIO), Diagonal, 643, 08028 Barcelona, Catalunya, Spain. Electronic address:

Competition for space is a remarkable ecological force, comparable to predation, producing a strong selective pressure on benthic invertebrates. Some invertebrates, thus, possess antimicrobial compounds to reduce surface bacterial growth. Antimicrobial inhibition is the first step in avoiding being overgrown by other organisms, which may have a negative impact in feeding, respiration, reproduction … The in situ inhibition of bacterial biofilm was used here as an indicator of antifouling activity by testing hydrophilic extracts of twelve Antarctic invertebrates.

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The exploration of novel antibiotic resistance determinants in a particular environment may be limited because of the presence of uncultured microorganisms. In this work, a culture-independent approach based on functional metagenomics was applied to search for chloramphenicol resistance genes in agro-industrial wastewater in Lerma de Villada, Mexico. To this end, a metagenomic library was generated in Escherichia coli DH10B containing DNA isolated from environmental samples of the residual arsenic-enriched (10 mg/ml) effluent.

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