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Michael Schmid

Researcher at Vienna University of Technology

Publications -  738
Citations -  34058

Michael Schmid is an academic researcher from Vienna University of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Scanning tunneling microscope & Karyotype. The author has an hindex of 88, co-authored 715 publications receiving 30874 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael Schmid include Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich & University of Zurich.

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Characterization of centromere arrangements and test for random distribution in G0, G1, S, G2, G1, and early S' phase in human lymphocytes.

TL;DR: In this paper, the arrangement of centromeres, cluster formation and association with the nucleolus and the nuclear membrane were characterized in human lymphocytes during the course of interphase in a cell-phase-dependent manner.
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Growth of an Ultrathin Zirconia Film on Pt3Zr Examined by High-Resolution X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy, Temperature-Programmed Desorption, Scanning Tunneling Microscopy, and Density Functional Theory.

TL;DR: The experiments and DFT calculations show that the core level shifts of Zr in the trilayer ZrO2 films are between those of metallic Zr and thick (bulklike) ZRO2, which indicates that the common approach of calculating corelevel shifts by DFT including final-state effects should be taken with care for thicker insulating films, clusters, and bulk insulators.
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Primitive sex chromosomes in poeciliid fishes harbor simple repetitive DNA sequences.

TL;DR: In this investigation hybridization of synthetic probes specific to genomic simple repeat motifs uncovers a sex-specific hybridization pattern in certain viviparous fishes of the family Poeciliidae, and the principal significance of heterochromatization as a means of generating differentiated sex chromosomes is evident.
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A New Nomenclature of Xenopus laevis Chromosomes Based on the Phylogenetic Relationship to Silurana/Xenopus tropicalis

TL;DR: A new chromosome nomenclature for X. laevis based on the phylogenetic relationship and chromosome length is proposed, in which the numbering of XLA chromosomes corresponds to that in X. tropicalis and the postfixes ‘L' and ‘S' stand for ‘long' and 'short' chromosomes in the homoeologous pairs, which can be distinguished cytologically by their relative size.