W
Wieland Meyer
Researcher at University of Sydney
Publications - 267
Citations - 15732
Wieland Meyer is an academic researcher from University of Sydney. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cryptococcus gattii & Cryptococcus neoformans. The author has an hindex of 66, co-authored 245 publications receiving 13757 citations. Previous affiliations of Wieland Meyer include Duke University & Humboldt University of Berlin.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Medical and veterinary mycology
TL;DR: Wieland Meyer, Laszlo Irinyi and Tania Sorrell Molecular Mycology Research Laboratory, Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Sydney Medical School–Westmead Hospital, MarieBashir Institute forinfectious diseases and biosecurity.
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Australian medical mycology culture collections: fundamental resources for mycological diagnosis and research
TL;DR: Currently in Australia, there are four major medical mycology culture collections that form a close collaborative network and are part of the World Federation of Culture Collections.
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Host transmission dynamics of first- and third-stage Angiostrongylus cantonensis larvae in Bullastra lessoni
Tsung-Yu Pai,Wieland Meyer,Fraser R. Torpy,Shannon L. Donahoe,John Ellis,Richard Malik,Rogan Lee +6 more
TL;DR: A comparison of infection rates and the larval distribution within the four designated snail regions demonstrated a significant relationship between anatomical region and density of infective larvae, with larvae mostly distributed in the anterior cephalopedal mass and the mantle skirt.
Journal ArticleDOI
P431 Tip to correct the variation position error in applying long-read high-throughput sequencing technology for fungal identification
TL;DR: This study found that self-assembling reference sequence generated from raw data of reading by using an auto-program named Canu causes the size-inflated sequence, a larger size calculated as 22.83 ± 7.56% than it should be, resulting in the shift of variation position.
of AD-hybrids
Min Chen,Jianping Xu,Margaret Hitchcock,J. Chung,Dongmei Yang,Volker,Rickerts,Marie Desnos Ollivier,João Inácio Silva,Wieland Meyer,Magdalena Florek,Urszula Nawrot,Andrés Puime,Frédéric Roger,Sébastien Bertout,Adeyinka A. Davies,Abiola Omobonike Adekoya,Rita O. Oladele,Raghav Vij,Sophie Marlen Tröger,Christine Walt,Axel A. Brakhage,Bernhard Hube,Sascha Brunke +23 more
TL;DR: The molecular typing approach used in this study represents a suitable tool for further epidemiological surveillance of this emerging pathogen in both animals and humans and highlighted the need to use a multigene phylogeny ideally in combination with other independent molecular markers to understand the species boundaries of dermatophytes.