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Dirk Linke

Researcher at University of Oslo

Publications -  125
Citations -  5262

Dirk Linke is an academic researcher from University of Oslo. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bacterial outer membrane & Trimeric autotransporter adhesin. The author has an hindex of 38, co-authored 112 publications receiving 4418 citations. Previous affiliations of Dirk Linke include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich & Max Planck Society.

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Phosphate availability affects the thylakoid lipid composition and the expression of SQD1, a gene required for sulfolipid biosynthesis in Arabidopsis thaliana

TL;DR: An increase in the relative amount of sulfolipid and a concomitant decrease in phosphatidylglycerol is discovered in Arabidopsis thaliana grown on medium with reduced amounts of phosphate, as well as in the pho1 mutant of A.Thaliana deficient in phosphate transport.
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Trimeric autotransporter adhesins: variable structure, common function.

TL;DR: It is proposed that this repetitive arrangement of domains facilitates recombination of domains to modulate the specificity of the common function: adhesion to the host.
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Type V secretion: mechanism(s) of autotransport through the bacterial outer membrane

TL;DR: The wealth of details known on the mechanism of single autotransporters from different classes and organisms, and put them into a bigger perspective are compiled and discussed.
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Tandem repeats lead to sequence assembly errors and impose multi-level challenges for genome and protein databases

TL;DR: A review of the problems associated with tandem repeat sequences that originate from different stages during the sequencing-assembly-annotation-deposition workflow, and that may proliferate in public database repositories affecting all downstream analyses, to raise the awareness level within the community of database users and alert scientists working in the underlying workflow of database creation.
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Emergence of carbapenem-non-susceptible extended-spectrum β-lactamase-producing Klebsiella pneumoniae isolates at the university hospital of Tübingen, Germany

TL;DR: A systematic exploration of intestinal colonization with ESBL isolates should be reconsidered, at least for haemato-oncological departments from where four of the five carbapenem-non-susceptible ESBL isolate originated.