Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Bacillus_anthracis> ?p ?o }
- Bacillus_anthracis abstract "Bacillus anthracis is the etiologic agent of anthrax—a common disease of livestock and, occasionally, of humans—and the only obligate pathogen within the genus Bacillus. B. anthracis is a Gram-positive, endospore-forming, rod-shaped bacterium, with a width of 1.0–1.2 µm and a length of 3–5 µm. It can be grown in an ordinary nutrient medium under aerobic or anaerobic conditions.It is one of few bacteria known to synthesize a protein capsule (poly-D-gamma-glutamic acid). Like Bordetella pertussis, it forms a calmodulin-dependent adenylate cyclase exotoxin known as (edema factor), along with lethal factor. It bears close genotypical and phenotypical resemblance to Bacillus cereus and Bacillus thuringiensis. All three species share cellular dimensions and morphology. All form oval spores located centrally in an unswollen sporangium. B. anthracis spores, in particular, are highly resilient, surviving extremes of temperature, low-nutrient environments, and harsh chemical treatment over decades or centuries.The spore is a dehydrated cell with thick walls and additional layers that form inside the cell membrane. It can remain inactive for many years, but if it comes into a favorable environment, it begins to grow again. It is sometimes called an endospore because it initially develops inside the rod-shaped form. Features such as the location within the rod, the size and shape of the endospore, and whether or not it causes the wall of the rod to bulge out are characteristic of particular species of Bacillus. Depending upon the species, the endospores are round, oval, or occasionally cylindrical. They are highly refractile and contain dipicolinic acid. Electron micrograph sections show they have a thin outer spore coat, a thick spore cortex, and an inner spore membrane surrounding the spore contents. The spores resist heat, drying, and many disinfectants (including 95% ethanol). Because of these attributes, B. anthracis spores are extraordinarily well-suited to use (in powdered and aerosol form) as biological weapons. Such weaponization has been accomplished in the past by at least five state bioweapons programs—those of the United Kingdom, Japan, the United States, Russia, and Iraq—and has been attempted by several others.".
- Bacillus_anthracis class Bacilli.
- Bacillus_anthracis domain Bacteria.
- Bacillus_anthracis family Bacillaceae.
- Bacillus_anthracis genus Bacillus.
- Bacillus_anthracis order Bacillales.
- Bacillus_anthracis phylum Firmicutes.
- Bacillus_anthracis thumbnail Bacillus_anthracis.png?width=300.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageExternalLink query_detail.php?c_hazard_ID=64.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageExternalLink PathemaHomePage.cgi.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageExternalLink patricbrc.org.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageExternalLink Taxon?cType=taxon&cId=1392.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageExternalLink www.niaid.nih.gov.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageID "18974125".
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageLength "24709".
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageOutDegree "92".
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageRevisionID "678215816".
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink 2001_anthrax_attacks.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink 454_Life_Sciences.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink AMERITHRAX.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Activator_(genetics).
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Adenylate_cyclase.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Aloys_Pollender.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Ames_strain.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Amino_acid.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Anthrax.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Anthrax_Vaccine_Adsorbed.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Anthrax_lethal_factor_endopeptidase.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Anthrax_toxin.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Anthrax_vaccines.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Antibiotic.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Antibiotics.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Archaea.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Archaebacteria.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillaceae.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillales.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacilli.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillus.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillus_cereus.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillus_mycoides.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillus_thuringiensis.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacillus_weihenstephanensis.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacterial_small_RNA.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacteriophage.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bacterium.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Beta-lactam.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink BioThrax.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Biological_agent.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Biological_weapon.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Bordetella_pertussis.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Calmodulin.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Casimir_Davaine.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Anthrax.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bacillus.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bacteria_with_sequenced_genomes.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Ciprofloxacin.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Cutaneous.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Dipicolinic_acid.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Doxycycline.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Edema.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Empire_of_Japan.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Endospore.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Eschar.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Etiology.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Firmicutes.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Fluoroquinolones.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Gene.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Genotype.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Genotypical.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Gram-positive.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Gram-positive_bacteria.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Gruinard_Island.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Heme.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Hemoglobin.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_Japan.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Iraq.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Kirov,_Kirov_Oblast.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Laboratory.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Lesion.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink MLVA.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Max_Sterne.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Micrometre.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Multiple_Loci_VNTR_Analysis.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Myoglobin.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Open_reading_frame.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Operon.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Oxfordshire.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Pathogen.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Pathogenicity_island.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Penicillin.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Phage.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Phagocytosis.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Phenolic_content_in_tea.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Phenotype.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Phenotypical.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Polyphenols_in_tea.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Portal_of_entry.
- Bacillus_anthracis wikiPageWikiLink Quinolone.