This is a aureus. This is a type of staph infection.
Bacteria in the large intestine can produce important vitamins for the body. For example, some bacteria produce vitamin K from eating fiber. Some bacteria also produce vitamin D.
No. A toxin is what you are thinking about. Bacteria are microbes and some produce toxins and some do not.
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Aerobic bacteria breath oxygen as they do their work. These aerobic bacteria are needed to convert the deadly poisonous Ammonia that all fish produce in water, firstly into poisonous Nitrite and then convert the Nitrite into virtually harmless Nitrate.
Genetically modified bacteria can be used to produce. This is a transgenic bacteria.
The slimy substance that the nose produces is called mucous.
Yes. Bacteria do produce toxins. Usually gram positive bacteria produce exo-toxins and gram negative bacteria produce endo-toxins.
Bacteria produce toxins as a byproduct. They are formed when the bacteria produce energy for themselves by changing one substance into another, and in some cases, there are byproducts, some of which can be toxins.
The best answer would be Antibodies; however, these do not chemically "attack" viruses or bacteria. More accurately, antibodies recognize various germs and allow the various cell types of your immune system to attack and destroy these germs directly. For more info on how this works see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adaptive_immune_system
Mold produces secondary metabolites called mycotoxins, which are toxic to bacteria and other organisms. Mycotoxins are a defense mechanism that mold uses to compete with other microorganisms in its environment.
they produce bacteria
Not all bacteria are poisonous, but some pathogenic bacteria can produce toxins that cause food poisoning when ingested. These toxins can make people sick when they consume contaminated food. Proper food handling and cooking can help prevent food poisoning caused by bacterial contamination.