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Simon Silver

Researcher at University of Illinois at Chicago

Publications -  187
Citations -  21292

Simon Silver is an academic researcher from University of Illinois at Chicago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Plasmid & Operon. The author has an hindex of 77, co-authored 187 publications receiving 20286 citations. Previous affiliations of Simon Silver include University of Michigan & University of Melbourne.

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Bacterial silver resistance: molecular biology and uses and misuses of silver compounds

TL;DR: Resistance to silver compounds as determined by bacterial plasmids and genes has been defined by molecular genetics and the use of molecular epidemiological tools will establish the range and diversity of such resistance systems in clinical and non-clinical sources.
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BACTERIAL HEAVY METAL RESISTANCE: New Surprises

TL;DR: The first bacterial metallothionein cation-binding proteins, which by definition is a small protein that binds metal cations by means of numerous cysteine thiolates, has been characterized in cyanobacteria.
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Silver as biocides in burn and wound dressings and bacterial resistance to silver compounds

TL;DR: Key issues remain, including importantly the relative efficacy of different silver products for wound and burn uses and the existence of microbes that are resistant to Ag+.
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Microbial arsenic: from geocycles to genes and enzymes.

TL;DR: The DNA sequencing and protein crystal structures have established the convergent evolution of three classes of arsenate reductases, which involve three cysteine thiols and S-As bond intermediates, so convergence evolution to similar mechanisms has taken place.
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Bacterial resistances to toxic metal ions--a review.

TL;DR: Recently, isolated genes defective in the human hereditary diseases of copper metabolism, namely Menkes syndrome and Wilson's disease, encode P-type ATPases that are more similar to bacterial CadA than to other ATPases from eukaryotes.