J. Bacteriol.

The pathogenic bacterium Bacillus anthracis has become the subject of intense study as a result of its use in a bioterrorism attack in the United States in September and October 2001. Previous studies suggested that B. anthracis Ames Ancestor, the original Ames fully virulent plasmid-containing isolate, was the ideal reference. This study describes the complete genome sequence of that original isolate, derived from a sample kept in cold storage since 1981.

Source:http://purl.uniprot.org/citations/18952800

Statements in which the resource exists as a subject.
PredicateObject
rdf:type
rdfs:comment
The pathogenic bacterium Bacillus anthracis has become the subject of intense study as a result of its use in a bioterrorism attack in the United States in September and October 2001. Previous studies suggested that B. anthracis Ames Ancestor, the original Ames fully virulent plasmid-containing isolate, was the ideal reference. This study describes the complete genome sequence of that original isolate, derived from a sample kept in cold storage since 1981.
skos:exactMatch
uniprot:name
J. Bacteriol.
uniprot:author
Decker R.S., Fraser-Liggett C.M., Jiang L., Keim P.S., Rasko D.A., Ravel J., Read T.D., Salzberg S.L., Stanley S.T., Wilson M.R., Worsham P.
uniprot:date
2009
uniprot:pages
445-446
uniprot:title
The complete genome sequence of Bacillus anthracis Ames 'Ancestor'.
uniprot:volume
191
dc-term:identifier
doi:10.1128/JB.01347-08