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Douglas B. Kell

Researcher at University of Liverpool

Publications -  657
Citations -  55792

Douglas B. Kell is an academic researcher from University of Liverpool. The author has contributed to research in topics: Systems biology & Dielectric. The author has an hindex of 111, co-authored 634 publications receiving 50335 citations. Previous affiliations of Douglas B. Kell include Max Planck Society & University of Wales.

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Book ChapterDOI

Evolutionary computation for the interpretation of metabolomic data.

TL;DR: This chapter describes evolutionary algorithms for mining data to generate useful relationships, rules and predictions in metabolomics and highlights their exploitation in metabolismomics.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Quantitative Survey of Bacterial Persistence in the Presence of Antibiotics: Towards Antipersister Antimicrobial Discovery.

TL;DR: Persistence is seen as a step on the pathway to antimicrobial resistance, and no organisms that failed to exhibit it are found, and an actionable knowledge base is consolidated to support a rational development of antipersister antimicrobials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solvent production by Clostridium pasteurianum in media of high sugar content

TL;DR: The fermentation end products of Clostridiumpasteurianum ATCC 6013 are normally acetic and butyric acids as discussed by the authors, however, when grown in media of high sugar content, significant quantities of solvents (acetone, butanol and ethanol) were produced.
Book ChapterDOI

The Protonmotive Force as an Intermediate in Electron Transport-Linked Phosphorylation: Problems and Prospects

TL;DR: This chapter describes the protonmotive force as an intermediate in electron transport-linked phosphorylation and its problems and prospects and predicts that, if the pmf is the energy-coupling intermediate in ETP, an artificially applied pmf should drive phosphorylated at a rate greater than or equal to the in vivo rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selective detection of proteins in mixtures using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry: influence of instrumental settings and implications for proteomics.

TL;DR: The ability to vary the conditions of a mass spectrometric detection method on-line provides an important degree of freedom for the selective detection, and hence discrimination, of individual proteins and peptides in complex mixtures and has implications in proteomics, in particular with respect to top-down strategies for proteomic characterizations.