review article | Q7318358 |
scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P2093 | author name string | F Baquero | |
P921 | main subject | environmental stress | Q107365219 |
P304 | page(s) | 5-10 | |
P577 | publication date | 2009-01-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Clinical Microbiology and Infection | Q15757285 |
P1476 | title | Environmental stress and evolvability in microbial systems | |
P478 | volume | 15 Suppl 1 |
Q35737979 | A membrane computing simulator of trans-hierarchical antibiotic resistance evolution dynamics in nested ecological compartments (ARES). |
Q36660833 | Antibiotic resistance shaping multi-level population biology of bacteria |
Q26753831 | Application of PK/PD Modeling in Veterinary Field: Dose Optimization and Drug Resistance Prediction |
Q38221309 | Bringing them together: plasmid pMV158 rolling circle replication and conjugation under an evolutionary perspective. |
Q37876027 | Ecology and evolution as targets: the need for novel eco-evo drugs and strategies to fight antibiotic resistance |
Q36576233 | Evolutionary consequences of antibiotic use for the resistome, mobilome and microbial pangenome |
Q38101433 | Functional advantages conferred by extracellular prokaryotic membrane vesicles. |
Q34637800 | Functional validation of putative toxin-antitoxin genes from the Gram-positive pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae: phd-doc is the fourth bona-fide operon |
Q33821510 | Genetic characteristic of class 1 integrons in proteus mirabilis isolates from urine samples |
Q39660863 | Hydrogen peroxide-dependent DNA release and transfer of antibiotic resistance genes in Streptococcus gordonii |
Q33743517 | Integrons: past, present, and future. |
Q34384553 | Salmon aquaculture and antimicrobial resistance in the marine environment |
Q48544038 | Tackling antibiotic resistance: the environmental framework |
Q42092273 | The IncP-1 plasmid backbone adapts to different host bacterial species and evolves through homologous recombination |
Q38064401 | Toxin-antitoxin genes of the Gram-positive pathogen Streptococcus pneumoniae: so few and yet so many. |
Search more.