- in the
Archaebacteria kingdom), but this term has
fallen out of use.
Archaeal cells have
unique properties separating them from
Bacteria and Eukaryota...
- An
archaeal virus is a
virus that
infects and
replicates in archaea, a
domain of unicellular,
prokaryotic organisms.
Archaeal viruses, like
their hosts...
- DNA
polymerases that
originate from thermophiles,
usually bacterial or
archaeal species, and are
therefore thermostable. They are used for the polymerase...
- much
larger than that of prokaryotes. The
eukaryotes emerged within the
archaeal kingdom Promethearchaeati, and are
closely related to the Heimdallarchaeia...
- oligomeric.
Dozens of
these structures can
exist on the
bacterial and
archaeal surface. Some bacteria,
viruses or
bacteriophages attach to
receptors on...
- from one
region to another. The
three types of
flagella are bacterial,
archaeal, and eukaryotic. The
flagella in
eukaryotes have
dynein and microtubules...
-
devoted to the
classification of
bacteria specimens into
taxonomic ranks.
Archaeal taxonomy are
governed by the same rules. In the
scientific classification...
-
those in land plants.
Bacterial cell
walls contain peptidoglycan,
while archaeal cell
walls vary in composition,
potentially consisting of glycoprotein...
- (chemical energy)
during photosynthesis in the
halophilic archaeal organism Halobacterium salinarum (syn. H. halobium). The
archaeal cell wall is omitted....
-
Archaeal transcription is the
process in
which a
segment of
archaeal DNA is
copied into a
newly synthesized strand of RNA
using the sole Pol II-like RNA...