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Showing 1–6 of 6 results
Advanced filters: Author: Cory C. Padilla Clear advanced filters
  • Ammonia oxidizing archaea and Nitrospinae are the main known nitrifiers in the ocean, but the much greater abundance of the former is puzzling. Here, the authors show that differences in mortality, rather than thermodynamics, cell size or biomass yield, explain the discrepancy, without the need to invoke yet undiscovered, abundant nitrite oxidizers.

    • Katharina Kitzinger
    • Hannah K. Marchant
    • Marcel M. M. Kuypers
    ResearchOpen Access
    Nature Communications
    Volume: 11, P: 1-12
  • Thaumarchaeota isolates are capable of utilizing urea and cyanate for nitrification in vitro. Here, the authors show that this occurs in situ and that Thaumarchaeota are able to use urea and cyanate as an energy and nitrogen source in the marine environment.

    • Katharina Kitzinger
    • Cory C. Padilla
    • Laura A. Bristow
    Research
    Nature Microbiology
    Volume: 4, P: 234-243
  • Bacteria of the SAR11 clade constitute up to one half of all marine microbes and are thought to require oxygen for growth; here, a subgroup of SAR11 bacteria are shown to thrive in ocean oxygen minimum zones and to encode abundant respiratory nitrate reductases.

    • Despina Tsementzi
    • Jieying Wu
    • Frank J. Stewart
    Research
    Nature
    Volume: 536, P: 179-183
  • Cellular, molecular, and functional changes occur in the endothelium during ageing. Ungvari and colleagues explore the links between oxidative and nitrative stress and the conserved molecular pathways affecting endothelial dysfunction and impaired angiogenesis during ageing, and also speculate on how these pathological processes might be therapeutically targeted.

    • Zoltan Ungvari
    • Stefano Tarantini
    • Anna Csiszar
    Reviews
    Nature Reviews Cardiology
    Volume: 15, P: 555-565