E. coli particularly thrives in raw meat, so it's really important to cook ground beef to 160 degrees Fahrenheit, as this ...
“E. coli is a bug that we all have in our intestines,” explains Britain's leading expert on E. coli, the microbiologist Professor Hugh Pennington. “The vast majority of the hundreds of different ...
There is much more to the story, however, particularly with regard to chromosomal structure and organization. Supercoiling explains how chromosomes fit into a small corner of the cell, but how do ...
Escherichia coli bacteria imaged by high-speed inline force mapping and fluorescence microscopy. Simultaneous topography and elastic modulus maps show a stiffening of the division site. Light and ...
The fact that E. coli can survive within the biological structure of spinach itself, as opposed to simply living in water on the surface of spinach, means that washing contaminated spinach isn’t ...
The crystal structure of pseudouridine synthase I from Escherichia coli, which, for example, modifies positions 38, 39 and/or 40 in tRNA, reveals a dimeric protein that contains two positively ...