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Annette Hansen

Researcher at Trinity College, Dublin

Publications -  5
Citations -  1189

Annette Hansen is an academic researcher from Trinity College, Dublin. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bacillus subtilis & Promoter. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 1058 citations.

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Condition-Dependent Transcriptome Reveals High-Level Regulatory Architecture in Bacillus subtilis

TL;DR: The transcriptomes of Bacillus subtilis exposed to a wide range of environmental and nutritional conditions that the organism might encounter in nature are reported, offering an initial understanding of why certain regulatory strategies may be favored during evolution of dynamic control systems.
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Global Network Reorganization During Dynamic Adaptations of Bacillus subtilis Metabolism

TL;DR: The responses of a bacterium to changing nutritional conditions are explored and an initial understanding of why certain regulatory strategies may be favored during evolution of dynamic control systems is offered.
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pBaSysBioII: an integrative plasmid generating gfp transcriptional fusions for high-throughput analysis of gene expression in Bacillus subtilis.

TL;DR: It is shown that detailed profiles of promoter activity can be established, with responses to changing conditions being measurable within 1 min of the stimulus, making pBaSysBioII a highly versatile tool for real-time gene expression analysis in growing cells of B. subtilis.
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Cell envelope gene expression in phosphate-limited Bacillus subtilis cells.

TL;DR: Control by the WalRK two-component system confers a unique expression profile and high level of promoter activity on the genes of its regulon with yocH and cwlO expression differing both qualitatively and quantitatively from all other autolysin-encoding genes examined.
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Signal Perception by the Secretion Stress-Responsive CssRS Two-Component System in Bacillus subtilis

TL;DR: The CssRS two-component system responds to heat and secretion stresses in Bacillus subtilis by controlling expression of HtrA and HtrB chaperone-type proteases and positively autoregulating its own expression is reported on.