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Prodigiosin formation by Serratia marcescens in a chemostat
J. S. Rokem
*
, P. Weitzman
*
Corresponding author for this work
Institute for Medical Research Israel-Canada (IMRIC)
Research output
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Article
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peer-review
16
Scopus citations
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Keyphrases
Serratia Marcescens
100%
Chemostat
100%
Prodigiosin
100%
Growth Rate
22%
Batch Culture
22%
Carbon Limitation
22%
Dry Cell Weight
22%
Specific Production Rate
22%
Nitrogen Source
11%
Steady State
11%
Carbon Source
11%
Steady-state Conditions
11%
Dilution Rate
11%
Nitrogen Limitation
11%
Phosphorus Limitation
11%
Culture Method
11%
Ammonium Sulfate
11%
Defined Medium
11%
Ammonium Nitrate
11%
Chemostat Culture
11%
Metabolite Formation
11%
Maximum Specific Growth Rate
11%
Specific Yield
11%
Immunology and Microbiology
Serratia marcescens
100%
Chemostat
100%
Prodigiosin
100%
Dry Weight
22%
Steady State
22%
Bacterium Culture
22%
Metabolite
11%
Dilution
11%
Cell Culture Technique
11%
Material Science
Metabolite
100%
Dilution
100%
Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutical Science
Prodigiosin
100%
Serratia marcescens
100%