Paul De Vos

Professor Em. Dr. Paul De Vos was a microbiologist at the University of Ghent and head of the department of Biochemistry and Microbiology until his retirement in 2015.

Scientific career

De Vos was full professor at the University Ghent and has over 30 years experience in scientific research on bacterial taxonomy and fermentation. He is author/co-author of about 170 peer reviewed scientific papers. He was head of the department and director of the BCCM/LMG bacteria collection.[1]

The laboratory for Microbiology (LM-UGent) belongs to the Department of ‘Biochemistry and Microbiology‘ of the Faculty of Sciences at the University Ghent. The laboratory is well known for its expertise in bacterial taxonomy of a wide variety of bacteria amongst which also a vast number of plant-related/plant pathogenic bacteria.[2]

In close synergy with the LM-UGent, the BCCM/LMG bacteria collection operates as an ISO 9001:2000 certificated Biological Resource Centre with facilities for preservation and distribution of bacterial cultures. The BCCM/LMG bacteria collection currently holds >23.000 strains, representing more than 500 genera and 3.500 species, subspecies or pathovars with a quite complete coverage of plant pathogenic bacteria.[3]

Publications

A published credit of de Vos is Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology, Volume 3: The Firmicutes (Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology 2nd Edition). He is author of over 170 scientific papers.

Legacy

The bacterial genus Devosia is named after him in honor for his basic contribution to the taxonomy of pseudomonads.[4]

gollark: Okay, mæybe fancy "indestructible" S©Ps, sure.
gollark: So you couldn't consistently... have the same item in the past?
gollark: You can't magically materialize objects into existence via time loops because there is no way to stop objects degrading in various ways.
gollark: <@!543131534685765673> Likely not.
gollark: Just as predicted.

References

  1. "Paul De Vos". Ucc.ie. Retrieved 2016-05-25. (registration required)
  2. "Welcome". Lmg.ugent.be. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  3. "BCCM/LMG Bacteria Collection". Bccm.belspo.be. Retrieved 25 May 2016.
  4. Nakagawa, Y.; Sakane, T.; Yokota, A. (1996). "Transfer of 'Pseudomonas riboflavina' (Foster 1944), a Gram-Negative, Motile Rod with Long-Chain 3-Hydroxy Fatty Acids, to Devosia riboflavina gen. nov., sp. nov., nom. rev". International Journal of Systematic Bacteriology. 46 (1): 16–22. doi:10.1099/00207713-46-1-16. PMID 8573489.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.