S
Slava S. Epstein
Researcher at Northeastern University
Publications - 118
Citations - 10308
Slava S. Epstein is an academic researcher from Northeastern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Species richness & Population. The author has an hindex of 42, co-authored 117 publications receiving 9270 citations. Previous affiliations of Slava S. Epstein include Boston Children's Hospital & Ningbo University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Genealogical analyses of multiple loci of litostomatean ciliates (Protista, Ciliophora, Litostomatea)
TL;DR: The main litostomatean lineages by morphological apomorphies are defined and the main evolutionary trends in the class Litostomatesa are unraveled.
Journal ArticleDOI
Bi-modal effect of piperonyl butoxide on the o- and p-hydroxylations of biphenyl by mouse liver microsomes.
H. Jaffe,H. Jaffe,Keiji Fujii,Keiji Fujii,H. Guerin,H. Guerin,M. Sengupta,M. Sengupta,Slava S. Epstein,Slava S. Epstein +9 more
TL;DR: It is shown that this bi-modal effect is due to a shift in equilibrium between the two microsomal enzyme activities, presumably through an isozymic transformation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Isolation of Microorganisms Using Sub-Micrometer Constrictions
TL;DR: An automated method for isolating pure bacterial cultures from samples containing multiple species that exploits the cell's own physiology to perform the separation is presented and individual strains of the same species can be separated out from mixtures.
Journal ArticleDOI
More Easily Cultivated Than Identified: Classical Isolation With Molecular Identification of Vaginal Bacteria.
Sujatha Srinivasan,Matthew M Munch,Maria Sizova,Tina L. Fiedler,Christina M. Kohler,Noah G. Hoffman,Congzhou Liu,Kathy Agnew,Jeanne M. Marrazzo,Slava S. Epstein,David N. Fredricks +10 more
TL;DR: A diverse set of novel and clinically significant anaerobes from the human vagina are isolated using conventional approaches with systematic molecular identification and several previously "uncultivated" bacteria are amenable to conventional cultivation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Enumeration of sandy sediment bacteria: Are the counts quantitative or relative?
Slava S. Epstein,Alexander D,Cosman K,Dompé A,Gallagher S,Jarsobski J,Laning E,Martinez R,Panasik G,Peluso C,Runde R,Timmer E +11 more
TL;DR: This represented the first attempt to place direct epifluorescence counts of benthic bacteria on a quantitative, rather than relative, ground and allowed for a rather complete quantification of sediment bacteria.