Bacterium in a sentence as a noun

Marshall thought that that the bacterium H. pylori might be the cause.

The rain storm he walked through, and the wet blankets he was wrapped in, had nothing to do with the bacterium that killed him.

You can select for a high-fitness phage with serial passages: Plate the host bacterium along with some phage.

> This kinda reminds me of how peptic ulcers were once thought to be caused by stress until they were found to caused by a virus [3]._H. pylori_ is a bacterium, as your source indicates.

From what I read, there's a big concern about contaminating Mars with Earth-based bacterium.

Very much like bacterium with all wheel drive capability.

The bacterium, was the typed answer, followed by the instruction, Comment on its toxicity to people.

Even if I were one such uploaded being, the difference between that being and I would dwarf the difference between me and a bacterium.

First of all, if you read the article you reference, you'll note that Heliobacter Pylori is a bacterium, not a virus.

Well, they did study the bacterium M. genitalium.

There are so many mobile elements in the environment... E coli, the humble gut bacterium, seems to have four copies of hydrogenase.

If everybody starts using this molecule, isn't the bacterium going to adapt, like with antibiotics?

The likelihood of a random bacterium being able to infect a human is very small unless there was evolutionary pressure for it to be able to.

However, it's not the reheating that causes the problem but the way the rice has been stored before it was reheated.> Uncooked rice can contain spores of Bacillus cereus, a bacterium that can cause food poisoning.

But here the bacterium forsook its contrived marriage with the cereal plants {40} and formed a more exciting but adulterous union with a tough and self-sufficient blue-green alga growing on the water surface of the paddy field.

This is very exciting progress, but let's remember that there is a rather important caveat with this sort of thing;"For their computer simulation, the researchers had the advantage of extensive scientific literature on the bacterium.

Bacterium definitions

noun

(microbiology) single-celled or noncellular spherical or spiral or rod-shaped organisms lacking chlorophyll that reproduce by fission; important as pathogens and for biochemical properties; taxonomy is difficult; often considered to be plants

See also: bacteria