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This enzyme is isolated from the thermophile, Thermus aquaticus.
After coppicing more light reaches the ground and thermophile animals such as the Sand Lizard thrive.
Thermophile forest: 200-600 m. Transition zone with moderate temperatures and rainfall, but the area has been deteriorated by human activity.
Since it grows in temperatures approaching boiling, at about 80 degrees Celsius, it is considered to be a thermophile.
The organism is a moderate thermophile (43-45 C) and an obligate aerobic chemolithotrophic autotroph.
The climate of the Kaiserstuhl also explains the vast richness of thermophile flora and fauna.
The areas is used for agriculture (grain growing, thermophile vegetables, fruits and - near Sobrance - for vineyards).
"Deoxyribonucleic acid polymerase from the extreme thermophile Thermus aquaticus".
It can be classified as a hyperthermophile because it thrives best under extremely high temperatures-higher than those preferred of a thermophile.
One notable difference is the presence of extra hydrogen bonds in the thermophile's proteins-meaning that the protein structure is more resistant to unfolding.
Thermophile enzymes have been used in biotechnology to perform important procedures such as DNA polymerase chain reactions.
Some rare thermophile plants can be found at the few tree-less places on the top of the hill, such as Gagea bohemica and Iris pumila.
A thermoacidophile (combination of thermophile and acidophile) is an extreme archeon which thrives in acidous, sulfur rich, high temperature environments.
A characteristical thermophile animal species is the insulated population of the dice snake (Natrix tessellata) that exists along the Nahe.
Acidicaldus is a genus in the phylum Proteobacteria (Bacteria), whose sole member is an acidophilic thermophile.
The bacteria is a thermophile and is widely distributed in soil, hot springs, ocean sediment, and is a cause of spoilage in food products.
Since its initial characterization by Wolfram Zillig, a pioneer in thermophile and archaean research, similar species in the same genus have been found around the world.
In a thermophile anaerobe (Thermotoga maritima) the Hsp70 demonstrates redox sensitive binding to model peptides, suggesting a second mode of binding regulation based on oxidative stress.
A thermophile that grows in near-boiling temperatures, Nanoarchaeum appears to be an obligatory symbiont on the archaeon Ignicoccus; it must be in contact with the host organism to survive.
Some are lithotrophs that oxidize sulfur to sulfuric acid as an energy source, thus requiring the microorganism to be adapted to very low pH (i.e., it is an acidophile as well as thermophile).
On the sunny side and in light deciduous forests, thermophile plants adapted to dry grounds can be found, for example daphne, smoke tree, holy grass, sessile oak, Solomon's seal, stonecrop, heath and others.
"You find thermophiles in lots of different groups and environments, which suggests that the property of thermophily is a primitive one," said Dr. Thomas D. Brock, a thermophile pioneer at the University of Wisconsin in Madison.
It is possible that the last common ancestor of the bacteria and archaea was a thermophile, which raises the possibility that lower temperatures are "extreme environments" in archaeal terms, and organisms that live in cooler environments appeared only later.
"At this stage of the game, it's a given that the first life was some kind of thermophile," Dr. Norman R. Pace, a microbiologist at Indiana University who is a pioneer in the study of the unusual microbes, said in an interview.