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Martin von Bergen

Researcher at Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ

Publications -  395
Citations -  19405

Martin von Bergen is an academic researcher from Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Biology. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 346 publications receiving 15305 citations. Previous affiliations of Martin von Bergen include Max Planck Society & Leipzig University.

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Comparison of preservation methods for bacterial cells in cytomics and proteomics

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated three different preservation strategies (sodium azide fixation, deep freezing and vacuum drying) with regard to their effects on bacterial cells and found that deep freezing was the method of choice, but simple vacuum drying of cells with storage at 4°C can be a convenient alternative.
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Function is what counts: how microbial community complexity affects species, proteome and pathway coverage in metaproteomics.

TL;DR: The findings showed that even with low species coverage, metaproteomics has the potential to reveal habitat-specific functional features and was observed that the main functional categories were better represented within complex microbiomes when compared to species coverage.
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Analysis of the STAT3 interactome using in-situ biotinylation and SILAC.

TL;DR: The approach applied provides a rapid and effective method, which is broadly applicable for studying protein-protein interactions and their dependency on post-translational modifications.
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Elevated gestational IL-13 during fetal development is associated with hyperactivity and inattention in eight-year-old children

TL;DR: This is the first study demonstrating that elevated gestational IL-13 increases the risk for children to develop behavioral difficulties, and analyses suggest that a reduced supply of gestational PC aa C38:6 contributes to elevated GestationalIL-13 leading to behavioral sequelae in the offspring.
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Monitoring of drug intake during pregnancy by questionnaires and LC-MS/MS drug urine screening: evaluation of both monitoring methods.

TL;DR: This study illustrates that a comprehensive evaluation of drug intake is neither achieved by questionnaires nor by biomonitoring alone, and a combination of both monitoring methods, providing complementary information, should be considered.