Streptomyces tendae explained

Streptomyces tendae is a bacterium species from the genus of Streptomyces which has been isolated from soil in France.[1] [2] Streptomyces tendae produces carbomycin, streptofactin, geosmin, cervimycin A-D and nikkomycins.[2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] Also said to be the source of Tendamistat (HOE 467), an alpha amylase inhibitor.

Further reading

See also

References

  1. https://www.uniprot.org/taxonomy/1932 UniProt
  2. [Deutsche Sammlung von Mikroorganismen und Zellkulturen]
  3. Dionigi. Christopher P.. Millie. David F.. Spanier. Arthur M.. Johnsen. Peter B.. Spore and geosmin production by Streptomyces tendae on several media. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. January 1992. 40. 1. 122–125. 10.1021/jf00013a023.
  4. Richter. M. Streptofactin, a novel biosurfactant with aerial mycelium inducing activity from Streptomyces tendae Tü 901/8c. FEMS Microbiology Letters. 15 June 1998. 163. 2. 165–171. 10.1016/S0378-1097(98)00167-0.
  5. Book: Collins. Peter M.. Dictionary of carbohydrates with CD-ROM. 2006. CRC/Taylor & Francis. Boca Raton. 0-8493-7765-X. 2nd.
  6. Book: Liu. editors-in-chief, Lewis Mander, Hung-Wen. Comprehensive natural products II chemistry and biology. 2010. Elsevier Science. Oxford. 978-0-08-045382-8. 1st.
  7. Herold. K. Gollmick. FA. Groth. I. Roth. M. Menzel. KD. Möllmann. U. Gräfe. U. Hertweck. C. Cervimycin A-D: a polyketide glycoside complex from a cave bacterium can defeat vancomycin resistance.. Chemistry: A European Journal. 19 September 2005. 11. 19. 5523–30. 15940739. 10.1002/chem.200500320. 22208204.

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