K
Klaus Werner Wolf
Researcher at University of the West Indies
Publications - 115
Citations - 2161
Klaus Werner Wolf is an academic researcher from University of the West Indies. The author has contributed to research in topics: Schizosaccharomyces pombe & Telophase. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 114 publications receiving 2068 citations. Previous affiliations of Klaus Werner Wolf include University of Lübeck & RWTH Aachen University.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Functional analysis of 150 deletion mutants in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by a systematic approach
K. D. Entian,T. Schuster,Johannes H. Hegemann,Dietmar Becher,Horst Feldmann,Ulrich Güldener,R. Götz,M. Hansen,C. P. Hollenberg,Gregor Jansen,W. Kramer,Sabine Klein,Peter Kötter,J. Kricke,H. Launhardt,Gertrud Mannhaupt,A. Maierl,P. Meyer,W. Mewes,T. Munder,R. K. Niedenthal,M. Ramezani Rad,A. Röhmer,A. Römer,Matthias Rose,Bernd Schäfer,M.-L. Siegler,J. Vetter,N. Wilhelm,Klaus Werner Wolf,Friedrich K. Zimmermann,Alfred Zollner,Albert Hinnen +32 more
TL;DR: Surprisingly, for seven genes, additional, unexpected phenotypes were found in the authors' tests, suggesting that the type of analysis presented here provides a more complete description of gene function.
Book ChapterDOI
Biosorption of Metals
TL;DR: This chapter deals with the use of fungal biomass for removal of metals from solution and refers to the literature since 1990, as the older literature has been reviewed exhaustively by Volesky (1990).
Journal ArticleDOI
Mitochondrial genetics. V. Multifactorial mitochondrial crosses involving a mutation conferring paromomycin-resistance in Saccharomyces cerevisiae.
TL;DR: The rules applicable to the mitochondrial genetic system and previously delinated from the studies of the ω-RI-RII-RIII segment specifying mitoribosomal functions have been shown to apply equally to PR strains.
Journal ArticleDOI
How meiotic cells deal with non-exchange chromosomes.
TL;DR: The amphitelic orientation of univalents in metaphase I and pairing of the chromatids in meiosis II appear to ensure correct segregation as well, as well as the possibility that the spindlepossibly joining forces with the kinetochores‐carries out the faithful segregation ofunivalents which are not directly physically attached to one another.
Journal Article
The clinical significance of an elongated styloid process
TL;DR: The clinical importance of the elongated styloid process is reviewed, which may produce characteristic head and neck pain syndromes, commonly known as Eagle's syndrome.