7 results match your criteria: "Riverside Life Sciences Centre[Affiliation]"
Microb Ecol
April 2018
CSIRO, Kintore Ave, Adelaide, Australia.
The red macroalga Asparagopsis taxiformis has been shown to significantly decrease methane production by rumen microbial communities. This has been attributed to the bioaccumulation of halogenated methane analogues produced as algal secondary metabolites. The objective of this study was to evaluate the impact of A.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Sci Technol
June 2017
Biology and Soft Matter Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory , Oak Ridge, Tennessee, 37830, United States.
Shale is an increasingly viable source of natural gas and a potential candidate for geologic CO sequestration. Understanding the gas adsorption behavior on shale is necessary for the design of optimal gas recovery and sequestration projects. In the present study neutron diffraction and small-angle neutron scattering measurements of adsorbed CO in Marcellus Shale samples were conducted on the Near and InterMediate Range Order Diffractometer (NIMROD) at the ISIS Pulsed Neutron and Muon Source, STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory along an adsorption isotherm of 22 °C and pressures of 25 and 40 bar.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEpigenetics Chromatin
May 2015
CSIRO Food and Nutrition Flagship, Riverside Life Sciences Centre, 11 Julius Avenue, Sydney, Australia.
Background: The identification and characterisation of differentially methylated regions (DMRs) between phenotypes in the human genome is of prime interest in epigenetics. We present a novel method, DMRcate, that fits replicated methylation measurements from the Illumina HM450K BeadChip (or 450K array) spatially across the genome using a Gaussian kernel. DMRcate identifies and ranks the most differentially methylated regions across the genome based on tunable kernel smoothing of the differential methylation (DM) signal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Ind Microbiol Biotechnol
March 2014
CSIRO Animal, Food and Health Sciences, Riverside Life Sciences Centre, PO Box 52, North Ryde, NSW, 2113, Australia,
Several unique Sus-like polysaccharide utilization loci (PULs) were identified from bacteria resident in bovine rumen microbiomes through functional screening of a fosmid library. The loci were phylogenetically assigned to the genus Prevotella within the phylum Bacteroidetes. These findings were augmented by a bioinformatic re-evaluation of ruminal Prevotella genomes, revealing additional loci not previously reported in the literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiology (Reading)
May 2004
CSIRO Molecular Science, Riverside Life Sciences Centre, Riverside Corporate Park, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia.
Incorporation of gene cassettes into integrons occurs by IntI-mediated site-specific recombination between a 59-base element (59-be) site in the cassette and an attI site in the integron. While the 59-be sites share common features and are recognized by several different IntI recombinases, the sequences of attI sites are not obviously related and are preferentially recognized by the cognate IntI. To determine the features of attI sites that are required for recombination proficiency, the structure-activity relationships of a second attI site, the attI3 site from the class 3 integron, were examined.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bacteriol
November 2003
CSIRO Molecular Science, Riverside Life Sciences Centre, North Ryde, New South Wales 2113, Australia.
IS5075 and IS4321 are closely related (93.1% identical) members of the IS1111 family that target a specific position in the 38-bp terminal inverted repeats of Tn21 family transposons and that are inserted in only one orientation. They are 1,327 bp long and have identical ends consisting of short inverted repeats of 12 bp with an additional 7 bp (TAATGAG) or 6 bp (AATGAG) to the left of the left inverted repeats and 3 bp (AGA) or 4 bp (AGAT) to the right of the right inverted repeat.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntimicrob Agents Chemother
January 2003
CSIRO Molecular Science, Riverside Life Sciences Centre, Riverside Corporate Park, North Ryde, NSW 2113, Australia.
A complex class 1 integron, In34, found in a conjugative plasmid from a multidrug-resistant Klebsiella pneumoniae strain isolated in 1997 at a hospital in Sydney, Australia, was shown to have a backbone related to that of In2, which belongs to the In5 family. In In34, the aadB gene cassette replaces the aadA1a cassette in In2, and two additional resistance genes, dfrA10 and aphA1, that are not part of a gene cassette are present. The aphA1 gene is in a Tn4352-like transposon that is located in the tniA gene.
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