Stetteria Explained
Stetteria is a genus of archaeans in the family Desulfurococcaceae.[1] Up to now there is only one species of this genus known, Stetteria hydrogenophila.[2]
See also
Further reading
Scientific journals
- Jochimsen B . Peinemann-Simon S . Volker H . Stuben D . Botz R . Stoffers P . Dando PR . Thomm M . 1997 . Stetteria hydrogenophila, gen. nov. and sp. nov., a novel mixotrophic sulfur-dependent crenarchaeote isolated from Milos, Greece. . Extremophiles . 1 . 67–73 . 9680304 . 10.1007/s007920050016 . 2. 27813068 .
- Burggraf S . Huber H . Stetter KO . 1997 . Reclassification of the crenarchael orders and families in accordance with 16S rRNA sequence data . Int. J. Syst. Bacteriol. . 47 . 657–660 . 9226896 . 10.1099/00207713-47-3-657 . 3. free .
- Zillig W . Stetter KO . Prangishvilli D . Schafer W . Wunderl S . Janekovic D . Holz I . Palm P . 1982 . Desulfurococcaceae, the second family of the extremely thermophilic, anaerobic, sulfur-respiring Thermoproteales . Zentralbl. Bakteriol. Parasitenkd. Infektionskr. Hyg. Abt. 1 Orig. . C3 . 304–317 .
- Noon. Kathleen R.. Guymon. Rebecca. Crain. Pamela F.. McCloskey. James A.. Thomm. Michael. Lim. Julianne. Cavicchioli. Ricardo. Influence of Temperature on tRNA Modification in Archaea: Methanococcoides burtonii (Optimum Growth Temperature [Topt], 23°C) and Stetteria hydrogenophila (Topt, 95°C). Journal of Bacteriology. 24 March 2003. 185. 3 July 2003. 5483–5490. 10.1128/JB.185.18.5483-5490.2003. 12949100. 193749.
Notes and References
- See the NCBI webpage on Stetteria. Data extracted from the Web site: NCBI taxonomy resources . . 2007-03-19.
- https://lpsn.dsmz.de/genus/stetteria LSPN lpsn.dsmz.de