scispace - formally typeset
M

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.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Pseudomale behaviour and spontaneous masculinization in the all-female teleost Poecilia formosa (Teleostei: Poeciliidae)

TL;DR: The behaviour of these masculinized gynogens is described and compared to the behaviour of the gonochoristic species Poecilia mexicana, P. latipinna and their hybrid as well as androgen-treated individuals of P. formosa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic plasticity and melanoma formation in the fish Xiphophorus.

TL;DR: Melanoma formation in certain interspecific hybrids of the genus Xiphophorus is associated with the overexpression of the Xmrk receptor tyrosine kinase oncogene, a highly unstable subtelomeric region of theX and Y sex chromosomes undergoing frequent rearrangements including duplications, deletions, amplifications, and transpositions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Draft genome sequence of Lactobacillus casei W56.

TL;DR: The draft genome sequence of Lactobacillus casei W56 shows immunomodulatory and probiotic properties and is also an ingredient of commercially available probiotic products.
Journal ArticleDOI

An interstitial nucleolus organizer region in the long arm of human chromosome 7: cytogenetic characterization and familial segregation

TL;DR: A three-year-old child in the consanguineous marriage of two heterozygous carriers exhibited the NOR-insertion in both of his chromosome 7 homologues, the first report on a homozygous carrier of a non-acrocentric NOR-bearing chromosome, to the authors' knowledge.
Journal ArticleDOI

A quantitative LEED analysis of the oxygen-induced p(3×1) reconstruction of Pt25Rh75(100)

TL;DR: In this article, a LEED I(E) analysis of Pt25Rh75(100) is presented, confirming the shifted-row model and finding that oxygen resides in threefold-coordinated sites on both sides of the shifted rows.