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Lars Snipen

Researcher at Norwegian University of Life Sciences

Publications -  72
Citations -  3380

Lars Snipen is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Life Sciences. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Enterococcus faecalis. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 67 publications receiving 2836 citations. Previous affiliations of Lars Snipen include Technical University of Denmark.

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A review of variable selection methods in Partial Least Squares Regression

TL;DR: A review of available methods for variable selection within one of the many modeling approaches for high-throughput data, Partial Least Squares Regression, to get an understanding of the characteristics of the methods and to get a basis for selecting an appropriate method for own use.
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Target recognition, resistance, immunity and genome mining of class II bacteriocins from Gram-positive bacteria.

TL;DR: This review discusses some important recent progress in these areas for the non-lantibiotic (class II) bacteriocins and discusses some examples of how the current wealth of genome sequences provides an invaluable source in the search for novel class II bacteriOCins.
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Microbial comparative pan-genomics using binomial mixture models.

TL;DR: Analyzing pan-genomics data with binomial mixture models is a way to handle dependencies between genomes, which is always present, and shows an extensive pool of rarely occurring genes in the population.
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The Abi Proteins and Their Involvement in Bacteriocin Self-Immunity

TL;DR: Site-directed mutagenesis demonstrated that the conserved motifs constituting the putative proteolytic active site of the Abi proteins are essential for the immunity function of SkkI, and to the authors' knowledge, this represents a new concept in self-immunity.
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Genomic Characterization of Campylobacter jejuni Strain M1

TL;DR: The C. jejuni pan-genome is identified, as well as the core genome, the auxiliary genes, and genes unique between strains M1 and 81116, and the findings are discussed in the background of the proven virulence potential of M1.