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Stefanie Mühlhausen

Researcher at University of Bath

Publications -  17
Citations -  482

Stefanie Mühlhausen is an academic researcher from University of Bath. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genetic code & Codon usage bias. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 16 publications receiving 370 citations. Previous affiliations of Stefanie Mühlhausen include Max Planck Society & University of Göttingen.

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Six Subgroups and Extensive Recent Duplications Characterize the Evolution of the Eukaryotic Tubulin Protein Family

TL;DR: Tubulins cannot be used for constructing species phylogenies without resolving their ortholog–paralog relationships, and the many gene duplicates and also the independent loss of the δ-, ε-, or ζ-tubulins suggest that tubulins can functionally substitute each other.
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Whole genome duplication events in plant evolution reconstructed and predicted using myosin motor proteins

TL;DR: The myosin inventories in angiosperms retain evidence of numerous WGDs that happened throughout plant evolution, in contrast to other protein families, many myosins are still present in extant species.
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A novel nuclear genetic code alteration in yeasts and the evolution of codon reassignment in eukaryotes

TL;DR: It is shown that Pachysolen translates CUG codons as alanine and not as the more usual leucine, which applies to all nuclear genetic code alterations and provides several testable predictions.
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Myosin repertoire expansion coincides with eukaryotic diversification in the Mesoproterozoic era.

TL;DR: By correlating the evolution of myosin diversity with the history of Earth, it is found that myOSin innovation occurred in independent major “burst” events in the major eukaryotic lineages.
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Molecular phylogeny of sequenced Saccharomycetes reveals polyphyly of the alternative yeast codon usage.

TL;DR: A phylogenomics analysis of 26 motor and cytoskeletal proteins from 60 sequenced yeast species and investigating the CUG codon positions with respect to sequence conservation at the respective alignment positions was able to unambiguously assign the standard code or AYCU.