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Theresa Scharl

Researcher at University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna

Publications -  38
Citations -  752

Theresa Scharl is an academic researcher from University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Vienna. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cluster analysis & Cluster (physics). The author has an hindex of 14, co-authored 34 publications receiving 640 citations. Previous affiliations of Theresa Scharl include Vienna University of Technology & Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich.

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Stroking of different body regions by a human: Effects on behaviour and heart rate of dairy cows

TL;DR: For instance, the authors found that cows' reactions to human stroking differ depending on the body regions being stroked, such as the withers, W, neck ventral, NV and lateral chest.
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A comparative analysis of industrial Escherichia coli K-12 and B strains in high-glucose batch cultivations on process-, transcriptome- and proteome level.

TL;DR: Differentially expressed groups for targeted host modification were identified like glucose transport or iron acquisition, enabling potential optimization of strains to improve yield and process quality and suggest similar regulation within a host at both levels for the identified groups.
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Comparative Transcription Profiling and In-Depth Characterization of Plasmid-Based and Plasmid-Free Escherichia coli Expression Systems under Production Conditions

TL;DR: This work reveals that the major metabolic burden in plasmid-based systems is caused at the level of transcription as a result of overtranscription of the multicopy product gene and transcriptional read-through of T7 RNA polymerase.
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Strain-dependent Regulation of Plasticity-Related Proteins in the Mouse Hippocampus

TL;DR: Genetic determination of synaptic plasticity-related mechanisms relevant for the molecular events mediating hippocampal information processing and storage is indicated by determining expressional levels of a panel of proteins involved in neuronal information processing in hippocampus of five mouse strains by immunoblotting.