4.5 Article

Gut anatomical properties and microbial functional assembly promote lignocellulose deconstruction and colony subsistence of a wood-feeding beetle

Related references

Note: Only part of the references are listed.
Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

An ancient family of lytic polysaccharide monooxygenases with roles in arthropod development and biomass digestion

Federico Sabbadin et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2018)

Editorial Material Microbiology

Microbes matter: herbivore gut endosymbionts play a role in breakdown of host plant toxins

Franziska Beran et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY (2016)

Review Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

Bacterial enzymes involved in lignin degradation

Gonzalo de Gonzalo et al.

JOURNAL OF BIOTECHNOLOGY (2016)

Review Ecology

Gut Microbiotas and Host Evolution: Scaling Up Symbiosis

Michael Shapira

TRENDS IN ECOLOGY & EVOLUTION (2016)

Article Biology

Wood decomposition as influenced by invertebrates

Michael D. Ulyshen

BIOLOGICAL REVIEWS (2016)

Review Entomology

Multiorganismal Insects: Diversity and Function of Resident Microorganisms

Angela E. Douglas

ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENTOMOLOGY, VOL 60 (2015)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Gut microbiota mediate caffeine detoxification in the primary insect pest of coffee

Javier A. Ceja-Navarro et al.

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS (2015)

Article Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

The Cockroach Origin of the Termite Gut Microbiota: Patterns in Bacterial Community Structure Reflect Major Evolutionary Events

Carsten Dietrich et al.

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY (2014)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

Binning metagenomic contigs by coverage and composition

Johannes Alneberg et al.

NATURE METHODS (2014)

Review Microbiology

Symbiotic digestion of lignocellulose in termite guts

Andreas Brune

NATURE REVIEWS MICROBIOLOGY (2014)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

The carbohydrate-active enzymes database (CAZy) in 2013

Vincent Lombard et al.

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH (2014)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

PhyloSift: phylogenetic analysis of genomes and metagenomes

Aaron E. Darling et al.

PEERJ (2014)

Article Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

Midgut transcriptome profiling of Anoplophora glabripennis, a lignocellulose degrading cerambycid beetle

Erin D. Scully et al.

BMC GENOMICS (2013)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

Fast gapped-read alignment with Bowtie 2

Ben Langmead et al.

NATURE METHODS (2012)

Article Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

Ray Meta: scalable de novo metagenome assembly and profiling

Sebastien Boisvert et al.

GENOME BIOLOGY (2012)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

Prodigal: prokaryotic gene recognition and translation initiation site identification

Doug Hyatt et al.

BMC BIOINFORMATICS (2010)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

The Sequence Alignment/Map format and SAMtools

Heng Li et al.

BIOINFORMATICS (2009)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Lignin degradation in wood-feeding insects

Scott M. Geib et al.

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA (2008)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

A probabilistic model of local sequence alignment that simplifies statistical significance estimation

Sean R. Eddy

PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY (2008)

Article Entomology

Communities of microbes that inhabit the changing hindgut landscape of a subsocial beetle

James B. Nardi et al.

ARTHROPOD STRUCTURE & DEVELOPMENT (2006)

Article Biochemical Research Methods

Self-made frits for nanoscale columns in proteomics

A Maiolica et al.

PROTEOMICS (2005)

Article Multidisciplinary Sciences

Tracheal respiration in insects visualized with synchrotron X-ray imaging

MW Westneat et al.

SCIENCE (2003)

Article Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

Wood ingestion by passalid beetles in the presence of xylose-fermenting gut yeasts

SO Suh et al.

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY (2003)

Article Zoology

Microorganisms in the gut of beetles: evidence from molecular cloning

N Zhang et al.

JOURNAL OF INVERTEBRATE PATHOLOGY (2003)

Article Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology

Cross-epithelial hydrogen transfer from the midgut compartment drives methanogenesis in the hindgut of cockroaches

T Lemke et al.

APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY (2001)