J
Jörg Stülke
Researcher at University of Göttingen
Publications - 205
Citations - 13941
Jörg Stülke is an academic researcher from University of Göttingen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Bacillus subtilis & Gene. The author has an hindex of 64, co-authored 191 publications receiving 12347 citations. Previous affiliations of Jörg Stülke include Centre national de la recherche scientifique & University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Carbon catabolite repression in bacteria: many ways to make the most out of nutrients
Boris Görke,Jörg Stülke +1 more
TL;DR: The most recent findings on the different mechanisms that have evolved to allow bacteria to use carbon sources in a hierarchical manner are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Condition-Dependent Transcriptome Reveals High-Level Regulatory Architecture in Bacillus subtilis
Pierre Nicolas,Ulrike Mäder,Etienne Dervyn,Tatiana Rochat,Aurélie Leduc,Nathalie Pigeonneau,Elena Bidnenko,Elodie Marchadier,Mark Hoebeke,Stéphane Aymerich,Dörte Becher,Paola Bisicchia,Eric Botella,Olivier Delumeau,Geoff Doherty,Emma L. Denham,Mark J. Fogg,Vincent Fromion,Anne Goelzer,Annette Hansen,Elisabeth Härtig,Colin R. Harwood,Georg Homuth,Hanne Østergaard Jarmer,Matthieu Jules,Edda Klipp,Ludovic Le Chat,François Lecointe,Peter J. Lewis,Wolfram Liebermeister,Anika March,Ruben A. T. Mars,Priyanka Nannapaneni,David Noone,Susanne Pohl,Bernd Rinn,Frank Rügheimer,Praveen K. Sappa,Franck Samson,Marc Schaffer,Benno Schwikowski,Leif Steil,Jörg Stülke,Thomas Wiegert,Kevin M. Devine,Anthony J. Wilkinson,Jan Maarten van Dijl,Michael Hecker,Uwe Völker,Philippe Bessières,Philippe Noirot +50 more
TL;DR: The transcriptomes of Bacillus subtilis exposed to a wide range of environmental and nutritional conditions that the organism might encounter in nature are reported, offering an initial understanding of why certain regulatory strategies may be favored during evolution of dynamic control systems.
Journal ArticleDOI
Carbon catabolite repression in bacteria.
Jörg Stülke,Wolfgang Hillen +1 more
TL;DR: The mechanism of lactose-glucose diauxie in Escherichia coli has been reinvestigated and was found to be caused mainly by inducer exclusion, and the gene encoding HPr kinase, a key component of CCR in many bacteria, was discovered recently.
Journal ArticleDOI
Regulation of carbon catabolism in Bacillus species.
Jörg Stülke,Wolfgang Hillen +1 more
TL;DR: The gram-positive bacterium Bacillus subtilisis capable of using numerous carbohydrates as single sources of carbon and energy is discussed, with antitermination apparently more common in B. subtil is than in other bacteria.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Bacillus subtilis crh gene encodes a HPr-like protein involved in carbon catabolite repression
Anne Galinier,Jacques Haiech,Marie-Claude Kilhoffer,Michel Jaquinod,Jörg Stülke,Josef Deutscher,Isabelle Martin-Verstraete +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that CCR of certain catabolic operons requires, in addition to CcpA, ATP-dependent phosphorylation of Crh, and HPr at Ser-46, as well as the discovery of a new B. subtilis gene encoding a HPr-like protein, Crh (for catabolite repression HPr).