Planctomycetes : cell structure, origins and biology
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Planctomycetes : cell structure, origins and biology
Humana Press, c2013
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Also available as an electronic book with a subscription to Springer ebooks
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book introduces Planctomycetes bacteria and deals in detail with their unusual structure, physiology, genomics and evolutionary significance. It is a definitive summary of recent knowledge of this important distinctive group of bacteria, microorganisms which challenge our very concept of the bacterium. Planctomycetes, and their relatives within the PVC superphylum of domain Bacteria, including verrucomicrobia and chlamydia, challenge our classical concept of the bacterium and its modes of life and provide new experimental models for exploring evolutionary cell biology and the full diversity of how living cells can be organized internally. Unique among bacteria, they include species possessing cells with intracellular membrane-bounded compartments and a peptidoglycan-less cell wall, and bacteria such as the anammox organisms performing unique anaerobic ammonium oxidation significant for global nitrogen cycle.
Table of Contents
1. History, Classification and Cultivation of the Planctomycetes
Cheryl Jenkins and James T. Staley
2. Cell Compartmentalization and Endocytosis in Planctomycetes: Structure and Function in Complex Bacteria
John A. Fuerst, Richard I. Webb, and Evgeny Sagulenko
3. Structural Aspects of MC Proteins of PVC Superphylum Members
Damien P. Devos
4. Cell Biology of Anaerobic Ammonium Oxidizing Bacteria:Unique Prokaryotes with an Energy Conserving Intracellular Compartment
Sarah Neumann, Muriel C.F. van Teeseling and Laura van Niftrik
5. Acidophilic Planctomycetes: Expanding the Horizons of New Planctomycete Diversity
Svetlana N. Dedysh and Irina S. Kulichevskaya
6. Towards the Development of Genetic Tools for Planctomycetes
Mareike Jogler and Christian Jogler
7. Genomics and Bioinformatics of the PVC Superphylum
Olga K. Kamneva, Daniel H. Haft, Stormy Knight, David A. Liberles, and Naomi L. Ward
8. The Distribution and Evolution of C1 Transfer Enzymes and Evolution of the Planctomycetes
Ludmila Chistoserdova
9. Unusual Members of the PVC Superphylum: The Methanotrophic Verrucomicrobia Genus "Methylacidiphilum"
Christine E. Sharp, Huub J.M. Op den Camp, Ivica Tamas, and Peter F. Dunfield
10. Phyla Related to Planctomycetes: Members of Phylum Chlamydiae and their Implications for Planctomycetes Cell Biology
Claire Bertelli and Gilbert Greub
11. Planctomycetes - their Evolutionary Implications for Models of the Origins of Eukaryotes and the Eukaryote Nucleus
John A Fuerst and Evgeny Sagulenko
12. A Final Word - The Future of Planctomycetology and Related Studies
John A. Fuerst
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