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Inga Sarand

Researcher at Tallinn University of Technology

Publications -  29
Citations -  1748

Inga Sarand is an academic researcher from Tallinn University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Microbiome & Alphavirus. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 25 publications receiving 1079 citations. Previous affiliations of Inga Sarand include Umeå University & University of Tartu.

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Microbiome definition re-visited: old concepts and new challenges

TL;DR: A definition of microbiome is proposed based on the compact, clear, and comprehensive description of the term provided by Whipps et al. in 1988, amended with a set of novel recommendations considering the latest technological developments and research findings.
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Means to improve the effect of in situ bioremediation of contaminated soil: an overview of novel approaches.

TL;DR: The emphasis of this review is to discuss some of the novel methods for which the value has not been clearly shown, but that in the view merit continued studies and efforts to make them work, separately or in combination.
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Evolution of bacterial consortia in spontaneously started rye sourdoughs during two months of daily propagation.

TL;DR: The evolution of bacterial communities in sourdoughs fermented at the same temperature did not follow the same time course and changes in the composition of dominant and subdominant bacterial communities occurred even after six weeks of backslopping.
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Microbial biofilms and catabolic plasmid harbouring degradative fluorescent pseudomonads in Scots pine mycorrhizospheres developed on petroleum contaminated soil

TL;DR: The identification of microbial biofilms containing catabolic bacteria in the external mycorrhizosphere is discussed in relation to both phytoremediation mechanisms and normal efficient nutrient mobilisation from highly lignin-rich forest soils.
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Mutations in the nuclear localization signal of nsP2 influencing RNA synthesis, protein expression and cytotoxicity of Semliki Forest virus.

TL;DR: Rec recombinant SFV replicons and genomes with various deletions or substitutions in the NLS, or with a proline-to-glycine mutation at position 718 of nsP2, were found to be the least cytotoxic.