Institution
Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg
Education•Halle, Germany•
About: Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg is a education organization based out in Halle, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Liquid crystal. The organization has 20232 authors who have published 38773 publications receiving 965004 citations. The organization is also known as: MLU & University of Wittenberg.
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238 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the role of biopores in the nutrient acquisition from arable subsoils and found that subsoil can contribute to more than two-thirds of the plant nutrition of N, P and K, especially when the topsoil is dry or nutrient depleted.
Abstract: In arable farming systems, the term ‘subsoil’ refers to the soil beneath the tilled or formerly tilled soil horizon whereas the latter one is denoted as ‘topsoil’. To date, most agronomic and plant nutrition studies have widely neglected subsoil processes involved in nutrient acquisition by crop roots. Based on our current knowledge it can be assumed that subsoil properties such as comparatively high bulk density, low air permeability, and poverty of organic matter, nutrients and microbial biomass are obviously adverse for nutrient acquisition, and sometimes subsoils provide as little as less than 10% of annual nutrient uptake in fertilised arable fields. Nevertheless, there is also strong evidence indicating that subsoil can contribute to more than two-thirds of the plant nutrition of N, P and K, especially when the topsoil is dry or nutrient-depleted. Based on the existing literature, nutrient acquisition from arable subsoils may be conceptualised into three major process components: (I) mobilisation from the subsoil, (II) translocation to the shoot and long-term accumulation in the Ap horizon and (III) re-allocation to the subsoil. The quantitative estimation of nutrient acquisition from the subsoil requires the linking of field experiments with mathematical modelling approaches on different spatial scales including Process Based Models for the field scale and FunctionaleStructural Plant Models for the plant scale. Possibilities to modify subsoil properties by means of agronomic management are limited, but ‘subsoiling’ e i.e. deep mechanical loosening e as well as the promotion of biopore formation are two potential strategies for increasing access to subsoil resources for crop roots in arable soils. The quantitative role of biopores in the nutrient acquisition from the subsoil is still unclear, and more research is needed to determine the bioaccessibility of nutrients in subsoil horizons.
238 citations
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TL;DR: Synthetic TAL proteins with designed repeat compositions were created using a novel modular cloning strategy termed “Golden TAL Technology” and activated targeted expression of exogenous as well as endogenous genes.
Abstract: TAL (transcription activator-like) effectors are translocated by Xanthomonas bacteria into plant cells where they activate transcription of target genes. DNA target sequence recognition occurs in a unique mode involving a central domain of tandem repeats. Each repeat recognizes a single base pair in a contiguous DNA sequence and a pair of adjacent hypervariable amino acid residues per repeat specifies which base is bound. Rearranging the repeats allows the design of novel TAL proteins with predictable DNA-recognition specificities. TAL protein-based transcriptional activation in plant cells is mediated by a C-terminal activation domain (AD). Here, we created synthetic TAL proteins with designed repeat compositions using a novel modular cloning strategy termed “Golden TAL Technology”. Newly programmed TAL proteins were not only functional in plant cells, but also in human cells and activated targeted expression of exogenous as well as endogenous genes. Transcriptional activation in different human cell lines was markedly improved by replacing the TAL-AD with the VP16-AD of herpes simplex virus. The creation of TAL proteins with potentially any desired DNA-recognition specificity allows their versatile use in biotechnology.
238 citations
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TL;DR: For localised ACC with a diameter of < or =10 cm, LA by an experienced surgeon is not inferior to OA with regard to oncologic outcome.
238 citations
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Technische Universität München1, Boston University2, Leipzig University3, French Institute of Health and Medical Research4, University of Western Brittany5, Council of Scientific and Industrial Research6, Tohoku University7, Semmelweis University8, Charles University in Prague9, Sanjay Gandhi Post Graduate Institute of Medical Sciences10, Heidelberg University11, Medical University of Łódź12, University of Szeged13, Goethe University Frankfurt14, Charité15, Martin Luther University of Halle-Wittenberg16, University of Giessen17, Innsbruck Medical University18, Otto-von-Guericke University Magdeburg19, Karolinska University Hospital20
TL;DR: The mechanism by which CPA1 variants confer increased pancreatitis risk may involve misfolding-induced endoplasmic reticulum stress rather than elevated trypsin activity, as is seen with other genetic risk factors for this disease.
Abstract: Chronic pancreatitis is an inflammatory disorder of the pancreas. We analyzed CPA1, encoding carboxypeptidase A1, in subjects with nonalcoholic chronic pancreatitis (cases) and controls in a German discovery set and three replication sets. Functionally impaired variants were present in 29/944 (3.1%) German cases and 5/3,938 (0.1%) controls (odds ratio (OR) = 24.9, P = 1.5 × 10(-16)). The association was strongest in subjects aged ≤ 10 years (9.7%; OR = 84.0, P = 4.1 × 10(-24)). In the replication sets, defective CPA1 variants were present in 8/600 (1.3%) cases and 9/2,432 (0.4%) controls from Europe (P = 0.01), 5/230 (2.2%) cases and 0/264 controls from India (P = 0.02) and 5/247 (2.0%) cases and 0/341 controls from Japan (P = 0.013). The mechanism by which CPA1 variants confer increased pancreatitis risk may involve misfolding-induced endoplasmic reticulum stress rather than elevated trypsin activity, as is seen with other genetic risk factors for this disease.
238 citations
Authors
Showing all 20466 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Niels Birbaumer | 142 | 835 | 77853 |
Michael Schmitt | 134 | 2007 | 114667 |
Niels E. Skakkebæk | 127 | 596 | 59925 |
Stefan D. Anker | 117 | 415 | 104945 |
Pedro W. Crous | 115 | 809 | 51925 |
Eric Verdin | 115 | 370 | 47971 |
Bernd Nilius | 112 | 496 | 44812 |
Josep Tabernero | 111 | 803 | 68982 |
Hans-Dieter Volk | 107 | 784 | 46622 |
Dan Rujescu | 106 | 552 | 60406 |
John I. Nurnberger | 105 | 522 | 51402 |
Ulrich Gösele | 102 | 603 | 46223 |
Wolfgang J. Parak | 102 | 469 | 43307 |
Martin F. Bachmann | 100 | 415 | 34124 |
Munir Pirmohamed | 97 | 675 | 39822 |