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46 results on '"Clark-Curtiss JE"'

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1. Mycobacterium tuberculosis PknK Substrate Profiling Reveals Essential Transcription Terminator Protein Rho and Two-Component Response Regulators PrrA and MtrA as Novel Targets for Phosphorylation.

2. Interplay of PhoP and DevR response regulators defines expression of the dormancy regulon in virulent Mycobacterium tuberculosis .

3. Salmonella Vaccines: Conduits for Protective Antigens.

5. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis relBE toxin:antitoxin genes are stress-responsive modules that regulate growth through translation inhibition.

6. Mycobacterium tuberculosis response regulators, DevR and NarL, interact in vivo and co-regulate gene expression during aerobic nitrate metabolism.

7. Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein kinase K enables growth adaptation through translation control.

8. Live attenuated Salmonella vaccines displaying regulated delayed lysis and delayed antigen synthesis to confer protection against Mycobacterium tuberculosis.

9. Live attenuated Salmonella vaccines against Mycobacterium tuberculosis with antigen delivery via the type III secretion system.

10. The prrAB two-component system is essential for Mycobacterium tuberculosis viability and is induced under nitrogen-limiting conditions.

11. Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein kinase K confers survival advantage during early infection in mice and regulates growth in culture and during persistent infection: implications for immune modulation.

12. Three Mycobacterium tuberculosis Rel toxin-antitoxin modules inhibit mycobacterial growth and are expressed in infected human macrophages.

13. DevR-mediated adaptive response in Mycobacterium tuberculosis H37Ra: links to asparagine metabolism.

14. The Mycobacterium tuberculosis TrcR response regulator represses transcription of the intracellularly expressed Rv1057 gene, encoding a seven-bladed beta-propeller.

15. Global expression analysis of two-component system regulator genes during Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth in human macrophages.

16. Molecular genetics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis pathogenesis.

17. Mycobacterium avium genes expressed during growth in human macrophages detected by selective capture of transcribed sequences (SCOTS).

18. Expression, autoregulation, and DNA binding properties of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis TrcR response regulator.

19. Microbial gene expression elucidated by selective capture of transcribed sequences (SCOTS).

21. Identification of Mycobacterium tuberculosis RNAs synthesized in response to phagocytosis by human macrophages by selective capture of transcribed sequences (SCOTS).

23. Cloning, sequencing, and expression of the mig gene of Mycobacterium avium, which codes for a secreted macrophage-induced protein.

24. Immunological and functional characterization of Mycobacterium leprae protein antigens: an overview.

25. A Mycobacterium leprae gene encoding a fibronectin binding protein is used for efficient invasion of epithelial cells and Schwann cells.

26. Leprosy vaccine.

27. Induction of Mycobacterium avium gene expression following phagocytosis by human macrophages.

28. A Mycobacterium leprae-specific gene encoding an immunologically recognized 45 kDa protein.

30. Escherichia coli heat-labile toxin subunit B fusions with Streptococcus sobrinus antigens expressed by Salmonella typhimurium oral vaccine strains: importance of the linker for antigenicity and biological activities of the hybrid proteins.

31. Overexpression of a Rhodococcus erythropolis protein in Escherichia coli with immunological identity to the Rhodococcus steroid 1-dehydrogenase. Immunoelectron microscopic localization and electrophoretic studies.

32. Molecular and immunological analysis of a fibronectin-binding protein antigen secreted by Mycobacterium leprae.

33. Localization of the steroid 1-dehydrogenase in Rhodococcus erythropolis IMET 7030 by immunoelectron microscopy.

34. Identification of Mycobacterium leprae antigens from a cosmid library: characterization of a 15-kilodalton antigen that is recognized by both the humoral and cellular immune systems in leprosy patients.

35. Cloning and characterization of the Mycobacterium leprae putative ribosomal RNA promoter in Escherichia coli.

36. Protein antigens of Mycobacterium leprae.

37. Identification and characterization of antigenic determinants of Mycobacterium leprae that react with antibodies in sera of leprosy patients.

38. Genetic relationships among Mycobacterium leprae, Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and candidate leprosy vaccine strains determined by DNA hybridization: identification of an M. leprae-specific repetitive sequence.

41. Molecular analysis of DNA and construction of genomic libraries of Mycobacterium leprae.

42. In vivo repackaging of recombinant cosmid molecules for analyses of Salmonella typhimurium, Streptococcus mutans, and mycobacterial genomic libraries.

43. Expression of Mycobacterium leprae genes from a Streptococcus mutans promoter in Escherichia coli K-12.

44. Conservation of genomic sequences among isolates of Mycobacterium leprae.

45. Characterization and taxonomic implications of the rRNA genes of Mycobacterium leprae.

46. A species-specific repetitive sequence in Mycobacterium leprae DNA.

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