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Advances in Microbial Physiology

  • 1st Edition, Volume 87 - August 27, 2025
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Robert K. Poole, David J. Kelly
  • Language: English

Advances in Microbial Physiology, Volume 87, the latest release in this ongoing long-established series, continues the tradition of topical, important, cutting-edge reviews in mic… Read more

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Description

Advances in Microbial Physiology, Volume 87, the latest release in this ongoing long-established series, continues the tradition of topical, important, cutting-edge reviews in microbiology. The book's editors have strive to view microbial physiology in the broadest sense by including any topics that help us understand how micro-organisms “work”. In this volume, Chapters deal with Diversity in the physiology and metabolism of chlorophototrophic bacteria, Multiple roles for iron in microbial physiology: bacterial oxygen sensing by heme-based sensors, and A Lysis Less Ordinary: The Bacterial Type 10 Secretion System.

Key features

  • Provides timely and authoritative reviews by recognized experts in microbial physiology
  • Strives to view microbial physiology in the broadest sense by including any topics that help us understand how micro-organisms “work”
  • Covers a broad range of highly relevant topics

Readership

Researcher and Scientiists, Academics and Educators, Industry Professionals

Table of contents

1. Title yet to decide
David John Richardson

2. title yet to decide
James Moir

3. Title yet to decide
Alastair G. McEwan

4. The bacterial Disulfide Bond Formation (DSB) system: so much more than a housekeeper
Despoina A.I. Mavridou and Nikol Kaderabkova

5. Title yet to decide
Martin Warren

6. Title yet to decide
Stephen Spiro

7. Title yet to decide
Stephen Busby

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Volume: 87
  • Published: August 27, 2025
  • Language: English

About the editors

RP

Robert K. Poole

Professor Robert K Poole is Emeritus Professor of Microbiology at the University of Sheffield, UK. He was previously West Riding Professor of Microbiology at Sheffield and until 1996 held a Personal Chair in Microbiology at King’s College London. During his long career, he has been awarded several research Fellowships, and taken sabbatical leave at the Australian National University, Kyoto University and Cornell University. His career-long interests have been in the areas of bacterial respiratory metabolism, metal-microbe interactions and bioactive small gas molecules. In particular, he has made notable contributions to bacterial terminal oxidases and resistance to nitric oxide with implications for bacterial pathogenesis. He co-discovered the flavohaemoglobin Hmp, now recognised as the preeminent mechanism of nitric oxide resistance in bacteria. He has served as Chairman of numerous research council grant committees, held research grants for over 40 years and published extensively (h-index, 2024 = 70). He served on several Institute review panels in the UK and overseas. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Chemistry and the Royal Society of Biology.

Affiliations and expertise
West Riding Professor of Microbiology, Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, UK

DK

David J. Kelly

Professor David Kelly is Emeritus Professor of Microbial Physiology at the University of Sheffield, UK. He has >35 years research expertise in bacterial physiology and biochemistry, membrane protein transport processes and bioenergetics, and has worked with the zoonotic food-borne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni for >25 years. A major program to study C. jejuni physiology was carried out in his laboratory, in particular the responses to oxygen, many aspects of carbon metabolism and functional analysis of the electron transport chains. He has long-standing interests in membrane transport mechanisms and in the 1990s discovered an entirely new class of periplasmic binding-protein dependent prokaryotic solute transporters, the TRAP transporters, now known to be common in a diverse range of bacteria and archaea. He has published >150 papers (h-index 2024 = 56), held numerous grants, served on grant committees and has been a regular invited speaker at national and international conferences. He is the recipient of a Leverhulme Emeritus Fellowship from the Leverhulme Trust, UK.

Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Microbiology, Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology, University of Sheffield, UK

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