ARCHAEBACTERIA

ärˌkēbăktĭrˈēə, diverse group of bacteria (prokaryotes), sometimes called the archaea and considered a major group unto themselves. Archaebacteria are contrasted with the Eubacteria, from which they differ biochemically in the arrangement of the bases in their ribosomal RNA and in the composition of their plasma membranes and cell walls. There are three major known groups of Archaebacteria: methanogens, halophiles, and thermophiles. The methanogens are anaerobic bacteria that produce methane. They are found in sewage treatment plants, bogs, and the intestinal tracts of ruminants. Ancient methanogens are the source of natural gas. Halophiles are bacteria that thrive in high salt concentrations such as those found in salt lakes or pools of sea water. Thermophiles are the heat-loving bacteria found near hydrothermal vents and hot springs. Many thermophiles are chemosynthetic (see chemosynthesis), using dissolved sulfur or other elements as their energy source and iron as a means of respiration. Archaebacteria emerged at least 3.5 billion years ago and live in environments that resemble conditions existing when the earth was young.

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Questia Books and Articles on: Archaebacteria
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books on: Archaebacteria  - 42 results

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...previously unknown forms of bacteria, the archaebacteria, that evolved well below the surface...type of single-celled organisms), archaebacteria have no nucleus. But unlike most...from sunlight or from other cells, archaebacteria feed on chemical energy produced within...
...life virtually at the same time that archaebacteria and eubacteria separated. Thus...1 The first bifurcation separated archaebacteria and eubacteria, and eukaryotes then...prokaryotes, which later subdivided into archaebacteria and eubacteria. Hence the rooting...
...very different. They named them the archaebacteria, to distinguish them from true bacteria...first organisms they assigned to the archaebacteria were methanogens, and this suggested...tentatively to name this urkingdom the archaebacteria. Whether or not other biochemically...
...domains of life include: 1 Archaea archaebacteria , 2 Bacteria eubacteria , and 3 Eukarya...Brown and Doolittle, 1997 . Archaea Archaebacteria are a major part of the global biomass...biology Jarrell et al., 1999 . All archaebacteria possess ether linkages in the lipids...
Archaebacteria, Eubacteria, and Eukaryotes About...unusual group, which they named the archaebacteria, whose molecular features include...organization is prokaryotic in plan. The archaebacteria are a heterogeneous collection of...
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journal articles on: Archaebacteria  - 10 results

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...phospholipids with ester head groups; Fig. 9); the Archaea or archaebacteria (slowly evolving but with variable membranes of phospholipids...lower limbs of the evolutionary tree, the methanogenic archaebacteria are strongly represented (Danson et al. 1992). Yet they...
...family encodes nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD1)-dependent protein deacetylases evolutionarily conserved from Archaebacteria to humans (Hunt et al. 2004). Arabidopsis has two SIRT homologs: AtSIRT1 (AT5G55760) and AtSIRT2 (AT5G09230...
...over time, initially relying on proteins that could create an electrogenic gradient. Regarding the V-ATPase, in some Archaebacteria, genes encoding subunits of the V0 and V1 sectors are encoded by separate operons (SHIBUI et al. 1997), arguing that...
...hypersensitivity. Ccc1p is a putative transporter for Fe21 and Mn^sup 2+^ (Li et al. 2001). Ccc1 has significant similarity to archaebacteria proteins (NP_393546, YP_023568, and NP_110542) including aDMIYGISDGL motif similar to DLIIGLSDGL in Ccc1 that...
...1997; Wu et al. 1999). These activities exist in a single polypeptide in reverse gyrase, an enzyme that is unique to archaebacteria (Declais et al. 2000; Duguet et al. 2001). In eubacteria and in eukaryotes ranging from yeast to humans, two separate...
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magazine articles on: Archaebacteria  - 8 results

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...theory of the origin of the cell nucleus as a fusion between archaebacteria (thermoplasma) and eubacteria (Spirochaeta). "We live...prokaryotes (cells with nucleoids: monera, prokaryota; archaebacteria, eubacteria) and eukaryotes (cells with nuclei: protoctista...
...disease, and other unpleasant human afflictions. The two most primitive of the living groups of bacteria constitute the Archaebacteria. One type, the methanogens, are poisoned on contact with oxygen (the earliest atmosphere of Earth was virtually oxygen...
...acetivorans, an anaerobe found in lake-bottom muck, decaying leaves, and the human gut. Phylogenetic analysis pointed toward archaebacteria as housing such predecessors, Alam explains. Using an algorithm to search microbial genomic databases, he found candidate...
...been "authenticated with a growth curve." Pennsylvania State University researchers report finding various bacteria and archaebacteria alive in 120,000-year-old ice from 3 km below Greenlands surface. At about -9 C, temperatures there were downright...
...claims the key primordial metabolic cycle resembled the reductive citric acid cycle, which operates in vent-dwelling archaebacteria. It is essentially the reverse of the citric acid cycle, which generates energy and expels carbon dioxide. Wachtershausers...
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encyclopedia articles on: Archaebacteria  - 5 results

 
 
ARCHAEBACTERIA ar kebaktir e , diverse group of...considered a major group unto themselves. Archaebacteria are contrasted with the Eubacteria...There are three major known groups of Archaebacteria: methanogens, halophiles, and...
...Bacteria fall into one of two groups, Archaebacteria (ancient forms thought to have evolved...recently proposed system classifies the Archaebacteria, or archaea, and the Eubacteria...cyanobacteria . Many of the thermophilic archaebacteria are chemosynthetic autotrophs. Beneficial...
...reproduce asexually. A recently proposed system classifies these organisms in two major groupings called Eubacteria and Archaebacteria , or archaea. Monera has been contrasted with the kingdoms of eukaryotic organisms (protists, fungi, plants, and animals...
...proposed from time to time. Analysis of genetic sequences in various organisms has recently suggested placement of the Archaebacteria into a separate major group called the archaea. In this system, the second and third major groups are the other bacteria...
ARCHAEA see Archaebacteria . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.


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