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Otto Schmidt

Researcher at University of Adelaide

Publications -  108
Citations -  4930

Otto Schmidt is an academic researcher from University of Adelaide. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Transfer RNA. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 108 publications receiving 4709 citations. Previous affiliations of Otto Schmidt include Stockholm University & University of Freiburg.

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Coagulation in arthropods: defence, wound closure and healing

TL;DR: The well-characterized clotting cascade in horseshoe crabs is strongly activated by bacterial elicitors, in contrast to vertebrate clotting where induction relies more on endogenous signals.
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Innate immunity and its evasion and suppression by hymenopteran endoparasitoids.

TL;DR: It is suggested that host–parasitoid systems are important experimental models for studying how the innate immune system of insects recognizes foreign invaders that are phylogenetically more closely related to their hosts.
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Hemolin: an insect-immune protein belonging to the immunoglobulin superfamily

TL;DR: Functional analyses indicate that hemolin is one of the first hemolymph components to bind to the bacterial surface, taking part in a protein complex formation that is likely to initiate the immune response.
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Induction and transmission of Bacillus thuringiensis tolerance in the flour moth Ephestia kuehniella

TL;DR: Evidence is presented that tolerance to a BT formulation in a laboratory colony of the flour moth Ephestia kuehniella can be induced by preexposure to a low concentration of the Bt formulation and that the tolerance correlates with an elevated immune response.
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The coagulation of insect hemolymph

TL;DR: The factors of the well-characterized clotting cascades of vertebrates, primitive chelicerates and crustaceans are used to assess the implications of sequencing the whole Drosophila genome for searching candidate genes involved in hemostasis.