TOP >> BOSTON UNIVERSITY >> Microbiology
 
Browse Institutions
You are viewing titles for BOSTON UNIVERSITY in the Microbiology available through the UMI Dissertations & Thesis Gradwoorks site
 
The antibacterial activity of PAD-1.17 and its effects on the Bacillus subtilis ribosome
Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 envelope glycoprotein-dependent and -independent mechanisms of dendritic cell-mediated virus capture and trans infection
 
The difference two strands make: ETEC pili structures create paradigm shift in pilus biogenesis and an opportunity for novel antimicrobial therapeutics
SIRT1 represses estrogen-signaling, ligand-independent estrogen receptor alpha-mediated transcription, and cell proliferation in breast cancer cells via inhibition of the phosphoinositide 3-kinases pathway
 
Metabolic networks and cross-feeding in microbial communities
The Alzheimer's disease-associated beta-amyloid protein is an antimicrobial peptide with a redox mechanism of action
 
The effects of nuclear receptor and Toll-like receptor crosstalk on HIV-1 replication in and transmission by macrophages and dendritic cells
Small RNA, iron regulation and antibiotic susceptibility in Escherichia coli
 
Porphyromonas gingivalis interactions with host innate immune mediators
Synthetic biology applications of engineered riboregulation
 
Metabolism in the human microbiome, from the single organism to the community level
Improving antibiotic activity by manipulating bacterial reactive oxygen species metabolism
 
High throughput genotyping and fingerprinting of Mycobacterium tuberculosis multi-drug resistant strains
The glycobiology of Plamodium, Toxoplasma, and Eimeria
 
TLR7-dependent and -independent responses of autoreactive B cells to nucleic acid containing immune complexes
Variability in the survival to sepsis: Inhibitory immunoglobulin G in plasma blocks macrophage mediated killing of enteric bacteria
 
Engineering solutions to persistent bacteria
Characterization of the S2 isolate of vesicular stomatitis virus
 
Induction of antibiotic tolerance in bacteria by self-produced and inter-species signaling