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Bas Teusink

Researcher at VU University Amsterdam

Publications -  208
Citations -  12497

Bas Teusink is an academic researcher from VU University Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metabolic network & Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The author has an hindex of 56, co-authored 193 publications receiving 10872 citations. Previous affiliations of Bas Teusink include University of Amsterdam & Delft University of Technology.

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Lost in Transition: Start-Up of Glycolysis Yields Subpopulations of Nongrowing Cells

TL;DR: How cell fate can be determined by glycolytic dynamics combined with cell heterogeneity purely at the metabolic level is revealed, extending fundamental knowledge of this central pathway that is dysfunctional in diseases such as diabetes and cancer.
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MEMOTE for standardized genome-scale metabolic model testing

Christian Lieven, +84 more
- 01 Mar 2020 - 
TL;DR: A community effort to develop a test suite named MEMOTE (for metabolic model tests) to assess GEM quality, and advocate adoption of the latest version of the Systems Biology Markup Language level 3 flux balance constraints (SBML3FBC) package as the primary description and exchange format.
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The danger of metabolic pathways with turbo design

TL;DR: The ubiquity of pathways that possess an initial activation step, suggests that there might be many more genes that, when deleted, cause rather paradoxical regulation phenotypes (i.e. growth defects caused by enhanced utilization of growth substrate).
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Reconstructing the metabolic network of a bacterium from its genome

TL;DR: The reconstructed network provides the opportunity to visualize the "omics" data within a relevant biological functional context and thus aids the interpretation of those data.
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Bet-hedging during bacterial diauxic shift

TL;DR: It is shown that actually only a subpopulation is fit enough to partake in the second growth phase and present an evolutionary model, suggesting that this phenomenon might entail a bet-hedging strategy that helps bacteria adapt to the unexpectedly changing environment.