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Ananda Mohan Chakrabarty (Bengali: আনন্দমোহন চক্রবর্তী Ānandamōhan Cakrabartī), PhD (4 April 1938 – 10 July 2020) was an Indian American microbiologist, scientist, and researcher, most notable for his work in directed evolution and his role in developing a genetically engineered organism using plasmid transfer while working at GE, the patent for which ...
Dipshikha Chakravortty is an Indian microbiologist, molecular pathologist and a professor at the department of Microbiology and Cell Biology at the Indian Institute of Science. Known for her studies on Salmonella and antibacterial resistance , Chakravortty is an elected fellow of the National Academy of Sciences, India , the Indian Academy of ...
Sunar, Kiran; Dey, Pannalal; Chakraborty, Usha; Chakraborty, Bishwanath (2013). "Biocontrol efficacy and plant growth promoting activity of Bacillus altitudinisisolated from Darjeeling hills, India". Journal of Basic Microbiology .
Pseudomonas putida is a Gram-negative, rod-shaped, saprophytic soil bacterium. [1] It has a versatile metabolism and is amenable to genetic manipulation, making it a common organism used in research, bioremediation, and synthesis of chemicals and other compounds.
Pseudomonas stutzeri is a Gram-negative soil bacterium that is motile, has a single polar flagellum, and is classified as bacillus, or rod-shaped. [1] [2] While this bacterium was first isolated from human spinal fluid, [3] it has since been found in many different environments due to its various characteristics and metabolic capabilities. [4]
Delftia lacustris is a Gram-negative, nonfermentative, motile bacterium. The cells are rod shaped, and are 2.3±0.7 μm long and 0.7±0.1 μm in diameter. Growth occurs at pH 5–10, temperatures of 3–37 °C, and salinities of 0–6 g/L. Growth is ideal at pH 6–7, 25 °C, and 1 g/L NaCl.
Irina Chakraborty (Russian: Ирина Чакраборти, Bengali: ইরিনা চক্রবর্তী, born 1980 or 1981) [1] is a Russian-Finnish-Indian scientist, an environmental engineer and a university instructor. [2] She has lived in Phnom Penh, Cambodia since 2011.
Listeria ivanovii can be distinguished from L. monocytogenes and other Listeria species by culturing it on sheep or horse blood agar, which will produce a wide, clear or double zone of haemolysis, producing a so-called positive Christie-Atkins-Munch-Petersen (CAMP) reaction with Rhodococcus equi but not with haemolytic Staphylococcus aureus. [8]