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Institution

University of Konstanz

EducationKonstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
About: University of Konstanz is a education organization based out in Konstanz, Baden-Württemberg, Germany. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Membrane. The organization has 12115 authors who have published 27401 publications receiving 951162 citations. The organization is also known as: University of Constance & Universität Konstanz.
Topics: Population, Membrane, Politics, Laser, Gene


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The most highly developed cooperative systems among prokaryotic cells appear to be the structurally organized phototrophic consortia of the Chlorochromatium and Pelochrom atium type in which phototroph and chemotrophic bacteria not only exchange metabolites but also interact at the level of growth coordination and tactic behaviour.
Abstract: After several decades of microbiological research has focused on pure cultures, synergistic effects between different types of microorganisms find increasing interest. Interspecies interactions between prokaryotic cells have been studied into depth mainly with respect to syntrophic cooperations involved in methanogenic degradation of electron-rich substrates such as fatty acids, alcohols, and aromatics. Partners involved in these processes have to run their metabolism at minimal energy increments, with only fractions of an ATP unit synthesized per substrate molecule metabolized, and their cooperation is intensified by close proximity of the partner cells. New examples of such syntrophic activities are anaerobic methane oxidation by presumably methanogenic and sulfate-reducing prokaryotes, and microbially mediated pyrite formation. Syntrophic relationships have also been discovered to be involved in the anaerobic metabolization of amino acids and sugars where energetical restrictions do not necessarily force the partner organisms into strict interdependencies. The most highly developed cooperative systems among prokaryotic cells appear to be the structurally organized phototrophic consortia of the Chlorochromatium and Pelochromatium type in which phototrophic and chemotrophic bacteria not only exchange metabolites but also interact at the level of growth coordination and tactic behaviour.

285 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
28 May 1997-Langmuir
TL;DR: In this paper, a method for the application of colloid monolayers to almost any surface where these difficulties are circumvented is presented, at first the monlayers are fabricated on glass substrates and afterwards floated off on a water surface.
Abstract: Hexagonally closed packed monolayers of colloids have found more and more applications, e.g. as lithographic masks. The monolayers are usually produced with the help of a self-organizing process where a suspension of colloids is applied to the desired substrate and left to dry. This method requires a good wettability and smoothness of the substrate, which severely limits the number of possible substrates. We present a new method for the application of colloid monolayers to almost any surface where these difficulties are circumvented. At first the monolayers are fabricated on glass substrates and afterwards floated off on a water surface. From there, they are transferred to the desired substrate. Examples where transferred monolayers were used as lithographic masks are shown on glass, indium tin oxide, and tungsten diselenide. The transfer of a colloid monolayer to a copper grid for transmission electron microscopy demonstrates the applicability of the technique to curved surfaces as well.

284 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jun 1989-Nature
TL;DR: It is reported that purified p68 also exhibits RNA-dependent ATPase activity and functions as an RNA helicase in vitro and that T antigen also has an RNA-unwinding activity, which may be involved in the growth-regulating functions of both proteins.
Abstract: It has been proposed that p68, a nuclear protein of relative molecular mass 68,000, functions in the regulation of cell growth and division. A complementary DNA analysis of the protein has revealed extensive amino-acid sequence homology to the products of a set of genes recently identified in organisms as diverse as Escherichia coli and man, which include the eukaryotic translation initiation factor elF-4A. The protein products of the new gene family have several motifs in common which are thought to be involved in nucleic acid unwinding. As yet, however, only elF-4A, through its effect on RNA, has been shown to possess unwinding activity. Here we report that purified p68 also exhibits RNA-dependent ATPase activity and functions as an RNA helicase in vitro. The protein was first identified by its specific immunological cross reaction with the simian virus 40 large T antigen, the transforming protein of a small DNA tumour virus. Surprisingly, T antigen also has an RNA-unwinding activity: the homology between the two polypeptides, although confined to only a small region resembling the epitope of the cross-reacting antibody (PAb204), should therefore be of functional significance. Furthermore, the RNA-unwinding activity may be involved in the growth-regulating functions of both proteins.

284 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Anaerobic enrichments with methoxylated aromatic compounds as substrates (vanillate, syringate, trimethoxycinnamate) were inoculated from freshwater mud and sewage sludge samples as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Anaerobic enrichments with methoxylated aromatic compounds as substrates (vanillate, syringate, trimethoxycinnamate) were inoculated from freshwater mud and sewage sludge samples. In 12 out of 16 cultures the same type of rod-shaped, motile bacteria was selectively enriched. Two strains, NZva16 and NZva24, were isolated in pure culture and recognized as Acetobacterium woodii by comparison with the type strain (DSM 1030).

283 citations


Authors

Showing all 12272 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Robert E. W. Hancock15277588481
Lloyd J. Old152775101377
Andrew White1491494113874
Stefanie Dimmeler14757481658
Rudolf Amann14345985525
Niels Birbaumer14283577853
Thomas P. Russell141101280055
Emmanuelle Perez138155099016
Shlomo Havlin131101383347
Bruno S. Frey11990065368
Roald Hoffmann11687059470
Michael G. Fehlings116118957003
Yves Van de Peer11549461479
Axel Meyer11251151195
Manuela Campanelli11167548563
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202360
2022202
20211,361
20201,299
20191,166
20181,082