Exogenous bacteria

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Exogenous_bacteria an entity of type: Species

Bacteris exògens són aquells bacteris introduïts en sistemes biològics tancats des del medi exterior. N'hi ha en l'aigua, la terra i l'aire. Aquest terme s'oposa als bacteris endògens que són els que formen part de la flora bacteriana normal d'un organisme. Exemples de bacteris exògens són: Vibrio cholerae, Legionella, salmonella, rickettsia, mycobacterium, i Bacillus anthracis. rdf:langString
Exogenous bacteria are microorganisms introduced to closed biological systems from the external world. They exist in aquatic and terrestrial environments, as well as the atmosphere. Microorganisms in the external environment have existed on Earth for 3.5 billion years. Exogenous bacteria can be either benign or pathogenic. Pathogenic exogenous bacteria can enter a closed biological system and cause disease such as Cholera, which is induced by a waterborne microbe that infects the human intestine. Exogenous bacteria can be introduced into a closed ecosystem as well, and have mutualistic benefits for both the microbe and the host. A prominent example of this concept is bacterial flora, which consists of exogenous bacteria ingested and endogenously colonized during the early stages of life. B rdf:langString
rdf:langString Bacteri exogen
rdf:langString Exogenous bacteria
xsd:integer 6862740
xsd:integer 1079277462
rdf:langString Bacteris exògens són aquells bacteris introduïts en sistemes biològics tancats des del medi exterior. N'hi ha en l'aigua, la terra i l'aire. Aquest terme s'oposa als bacteris endògens que són els que formen part de la flora bacteriana normal d'un organisme. Exemples de bacteris exògens són: Vibrio cholerae, Legionella, salmonella, rickettsia, mycobacterium, i Bacillus anthracis.
rdf:langString Exogenous bacteria are microorganisms introduced to closed biological systems from the external world. They exist in aquatic and terrestrial environments, as well as the atmosphere. Microorganisms in the external environment have existed on Earth for 3.5 billion years. Exogenous bacteria can be either benign or pathogenic. Pathogenic exogenous bacteria can enter a closed biological system and cause disease such as Cholera, which is induced by a waterborne microbe that infects the human intestine. Exogenous bacteria can be introduced into a closed ecosystem as well, and have mutualistic benefits for both the microbe and the host. A prominent example of this concept is bacterial flora, which consists of exogenous bacteria ingested and endogenously colonized during the early stages of life. Bacteria that are part of normal internal ecosystems, also known as bacterial flora, are called Endogenous Bacteria. A significant amount of prominent diseases are induced by exogenous bacteria such as gonorrhea, meningitis, tetanus, and syphilis. Pathogenic exogenous bacteria can enter a host via cutaneous transmission, inhalation, and consumption.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11373

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