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One bacterium has 2,000 to 6,000 proteins.
Bacteria: The only culture some people have.
I wish, I wish I were a poisonous bacterium.
If you don't like bacteria, you're on the wrong planet.
My bacteria glow in the dark - no human being doesn't like that.
We mostly don't get sick. Most often, bacteria are keeping us well.
They all have in common that they are bacteria caused by bowel and feces.
Happiness and bacteria have one thing in common; they multiply by dividing!
Biocides, for example, are designed to kill bacteria—it's not a benign material.
You live in intimate association with bacteria, and you couldn't survive without them.
Bacteria mineralized the rocks; they deposited the iron. They made the geology we see.
Every time someone uses a bathroom and they flush, all the bacteria is shot into the air.
Am I simply a vehicle for numerous bacteria that inhabit my microbiome? Or are they hosting me?
Periodontal bacteria can easily slip into the bloodstream and cause infection elsewhere in the body.
What you see is that the most outstanding feature of life's history is a constant domination by bacteria.
Carole Lartigue led the effort to actually transplant a bacterial chromosome from one bacteria to another.
Biology will relate every human gene to the genes of other animals and bacteria, to this great chain of being.
I don't get sick much because in the U.S. I always eat with my fingers, you know, to get used to the bacteria.
Family was a fertile breeding ground for the kind of psychological bacteria that warped minds and devoured hope.
By weight, you are more human than bacteria, because your cells are bigger, but by numbers, it's not even close.
From dead plant matter to nematodes to bacteria, never underestimate the cleverness of mushrooms to find new food!
Your skin is a barrier that protects you from environmental aggressors like pollution, bacteria and moisture loss.
What's great about bacteria is you have a surprise every day waiting for you because they're so fast, they grow overnight.
There is no significant difference between human activities and those by amoebas and even bacteria, well, on the GRAND SCALE.
Everyone is trying to jump on the biomimic bandwagon. But a cork floor is not biomimicry. Neither is using bacteria to clean water.
Bacteria and parasites cannot cause disease processes unless they find their own peculiar morbid soil in which to grow and multiply.
The world powers established this filthy bacteria, the Zionist regime, which is lashing out at the nations in the region like a wild beast.
You cannot insert a gene you took from a bacteria into a seed and call it LIFE. You have not created life, instead you have only polluted it.
As far as I am concerned, LGBT can only stand for leprosy, gonorrhea, bacteria, and tuberculosis, all of which are detrimental to human existence.
Salad bars are like a restaurant's lungs. They soak up the impurities and bacteria in the environment, leaving you with much cleaner air to enjoy.
It seems now clear that a belief in the functional importance of all enzymes found in bacteria is possible only to those richly endowed with Faith.
Accidents at power plants are bad enough. But a leak from a bioreactor could be worse, since bacteria can learn new tricks when you're not looking.
If you go far enough back, your genome connects you with bacteria, butterflies, and barracuda - the great chain of being linked together through DNA.
It's incorrect to think of bacteria as these asocial, single cells. They are individual cells, but they act in communities, exactly the way people do.
Bacteria live in unbelievable mixtures of hundreds or thousands of species. Like on your teeth. There are 600 species of bacteria on your teeth every morning.
Microbes such as bacteria and yeast use enzymes to make fuels from biomass. We use directed evolution to perfect those enzymes and make new fuels efficiently.
For the first half of geological time our ancestors were bacteria. Most creatures still are bacteria, and each one of our trillions of cells is a colony of bacteria.
Certain foods, such as meat, appear to harbour toxic bacteria - known as endotoxins - that can trigger inflammation in your arteries, even when food is fully cooked.
I actually believe that you should not wash your jeans, ever. In Japan, they actually put them in the freezer. That kills the bacteria and makes them not smell anymore.
To declare war on ninety-nine percent of bacteria when less than percent of them threaten our health makes no sense. Many of the bacteria we're killing are our protectors.
I'd like to see what fraction of things that chemists have figured out we could actually teach nature to do. Then we really could replace chemical factories with bacteria.
A great deal has been learned about cell communication. The universal nature of cellular structure and organization in bacteria, plant and animal cells has been discovered.
Back in 1983, the United States government approved the release of the first genetically modified organism. In this case, it was a bacteria that prevents frost on food crops.
Reducing MRSA infections is critical because these bacteria are difficult to treat and are common in healthcare settings, especially among ICU (intensive care unit) patients.
If a bacterium is trying to infect you, it won't secrete alone, because your immune system will block it. Bacteria will hide until they can all act together and make an impact.
You can find bacteria everywhere. They're invisible to us. I've never seen a bacterium, except under a microscope. They're so small, we don't see them, but they are everywhere.
I love weird science. I learned in an article in 'National Geographic' that there are trillions of bacteria in our guts that help us digest food. These are non-human creatures.
The biggest food-related risk in pregnancy is listeria. It's a dangerous bacteria, to which pregnant women are especially susceptible, that can lead to miscarriage or stillbirth.
Think of the earth as a living organism that is being attacked by billions of bacteria whose numbers double every forty years. Either the host dies, or the virus dies, or both die.
When antibiotics first came out, nobody could have imagined we'd have the resistance problem we face today. We didn't give bacteria credit for being able to change and adapt so fast.