J
Janet L. Schottel
Researcher at University of Minnesota
Publications - 62
Citations - 2461
Janet L. Schottel is an academic researcher from University of Minnesota. The author has contributed to research in topics: Streptomyces scabies & Gene. The author has an hindex of 26, co-authored 62 publications receiving 2388 citations. Previous affiliations of Janet L. Schottel include Stanford University & University of Yamanashi.
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Effects of alterations in the translation control region on bacterial gene expression: use of cat gene constructs transcribed from the lac promoter as a model system
TL;DR: Altering the potential for secondary structure formation within the translation control region caused a tenfold variation in the synthesis of CAT enzyme, whereas varying the distance between the Shine-Dalgarno sequence (SD) and the translation start codon from 7 to 13 bases did not significantly affect the yield of CAT.
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Quantitative relationships among thaxtomin A production, potato scab severity, and fatty acid composition in Streptomyces
TL;DR: The data indicate that quantitative information on the ability of a particular pathogen isolate or population to produce thaxtomin A may be critical to understanding and predicting the disease potential of that population.
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A patch coating method for preparing biocatalytic films of Escherichia coli.
Olav K. Lyngberg,V. Thiagarajan,D. J. Stemke,Janet L. Schottel,L. E. Scriven,Michael C. Flickinger +5 more
TL;DR: Measurements of total RNA and DNA from immobilized and suspended cells indicated that cells immobilized in the thin polymer layer have higher specific beta-galactosidase activity and a slower total RNA degradation rate than suspended cells over 15 days.
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Effect of Pathogen Isolate, Potato Cultivar, and Antagonist Strain on Potato Scab Severity and Biological Control
TL;DR: The diverse origins of significant variation in potato scab biocontrol suggest that consistent control in the field is likely to be difficult to achieve.
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Evidence for interspecies communication and its potential role in pathogen suppression in a naturally occurring disease suppressive soil
TL;DR: No evidence was found for production of homoserine lactones by any of the Streptomyces strains nor for the production of autoinducers by PonSSII, however, addition of conditioned broth from Streptomeces strains to cultures of Pon SSII stimulated, suppressed, or had...