Did Archaeal and Bacterial Cells Arise Independently from Noncellular Precursors? A Hypothesis Stating That the Advent of Membrane Phospholipid with Enantiomeric Glycerophosphate Backbones Caused the Separation of the Two Lines of Descent (Q34451271)
scientific article published on January 1, 1998
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(P31) (Q13442814)
(P304) 54-63
(P407) (Q1860)
(P433) 1
(P478) 46
(P577) Thursday, January 1, 1998
Thursday, January 1, 1998
(P921) (Q494483)
(Q4299308)
(Q65980060)
(P953) http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/PL00006283.pdf
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/PL00006283/fulltext.html
http://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/PL00006283
(P1433) (Q6295595)
(P1476) "Did archaeal and bacterial cells arise independently from noncellular precursors? A hypothesis stating that the advent of membrane phospholipid with enantiomeric glycerophosphate backbones caused the separation of the two lines of descent" (language: en)
"Did Archaeal and Bacterial Cells Arise Independently from Noncellular Precursors? A Hypothesis Stating That the Advent of Membrane Phospholipid with Enantiomeric Glycerophosphate Backbones Caused the Separation of the Two Lines of Descent" (language: en)
(P2093) Y. Koga
T. Kyuragi
M. Nishihara
N. Sone
(P2860) (Q36768575)
other details
description scientific article published on January 1, 1998

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