Microbes and disease

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Microbes and disease

 

Girolamo Fracastoro, an Italian scholar, advanced the notion as early as the mid-1500s that contagion is an infection that passes from one thing to another. A description of precisely what is passed along eluded discovery until the late 1800s, when the work of many scientists, Pasteur foremost among them, determined the role of bacteria in fermentation and disease. Robert Koch, a German physician, defined the procedure (Koch’s postulates) for proving that a specific organism causes a specific disease.

 

The foundation of microbiology was securely laid during the period from about 1880 to 1900. Students of Pasteur, Koch, and others discovered in rapid succession a host of bacteria capable of causing specific diseases (pathogens). They also elaborated an extensive arsenal of techniques and laboratory procedures for revealing the ubiquity, diversity, and abilities of microbes.

 

Applied Microbiology: Open Access is a scholarly open access journal that deals with the study of Medical microbiology the study of the pathogenic microbes and the role of microbes in human illness, Pharmaceutical microbiology the study of microorganisms that are related to the production of antibiotics, enzymes, vitamins and vaccines, Industrial microbiology the exploitation of microbes for use in industrial processes

It is a great honor and pleasure for me to invite you to participate in this themed issue by contributing your unique idea for our forthcoming issues (volume 6, issue1) in the form of Research, Reviews, Commentaries, Letter to Editor, Case Reports, Short Communication, Images, Conference Proceedings which will be published in our journal.

For further information on special issue guidelines and submission process, please contact appliedmicrobiol@microbiologyres.com, appliedmicrobiol@oajournal.org or applmicrobiol@longdom.org

 

Media Contact:
Jessica
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Applied Microbiology : Open Access

Whatsup: +32-2-808-70-17
Email: appliedmicrobiol@oajournal.org