Chryseobacterium anthropi

Chryseobacterium anthropi is a Gram-negative bacteria from the genus of Chryseobacterium.[1][2][3]

Chryseobacterium anthropi
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
C. anthropi
Binomial name
Chryseobacterium anthropi
Kämpfer et al. 2009[1]
Type strain
CCUG 52764, CIP 109762, CCUG 15260, CCUG 52762[2]

Further reading

  • Kämpfer, P; Vaneechoutte, M; Lodders, N; De Baere, T; Avesani, V; Janssens, M; Busse, HJ; Wauters, G (October 2009). "Description of Chryseobacterium anthropi sp. nov. to accommodate clinical isolates biochemically similar to Kaistella koreensis and Chryseobacterium haifense, proposal to reclassify Kaistella koreensis as Chryseobacterium koreense comb. nov. and emended description of the genus Chryseobacterium". International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology. 59 (Pt 10): 2421–8. doi:10.1099/ijs.0.008250-0. PMID 19622666.
  • Liu, edited by Dongyou (2011). Molecular Detection of Human Bacterial Pathogens. Hoboken: CRC Press. ISBN 1-4398-1239-X.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
gollark: Sounds more like a programming language challenge thing.
gollark: Or "binary" for short.
gollark: Hmm, maybe "biunary" would make sense as a name for that.
gollark: UCF-8.
gollark: Since it actually has to cover all Unicode, and works on blocks of 8 bits (we can call them "bytes"), we could call it Unicode Text Format - 8, or UTF-8.

References

  1. LPSN lpsn.dsmz.de
  2. UniProt
  3. Stephen, Dr. Berger (2015). GIDEON Guide to Medically Important Bacteria. GIDEON Informatics Inc. ISBN 1-4988-0429-2.


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