Marine diatoms Coscinodiscus granii: They live in open waters such as the North Sea. Under the microscope, many single-celled diatoms can be seen, some of which are healthy, while others are infected by an egg fungus. The zoospores that the fungus forms for reproduction can be seen as small dots.

Publications of Katrin Bohl

Journal Article (3)

2016
Journal Article
Germerodt, S.; Bohl, K.; Lück, A.; Pande, S.; Schröter, A.; Kaleta, C.; Schuster, S.; Kost, C.: Pervasive selection for cooperative cross-feeding in bacterial communities. PLoS Computational Biology 12 (6), e1004986 (2016)
2014
Journal Article
D'Souza, G.; Waschina, S.; Pande, S.; Bohl, K.; Kaleta, C.; Kost, C.: Less is more: Selective advantages can explain the prevalent loss of biosynthetic genes in bacteria. Evolution: International Journal of Organic Evolution 68 (9), pp. 2559 - 2570 (2014)
Journal Article
Pande, S.; Merker, H.; Bohl, K.; Reichelt, M.; Schuster, S.; de Figueiredo, L. F.; Kaleta, C.; Kost, C.: Fitness and stability of obligate cross-feeding interactions that emerge upon gene loss in bacteria. The ISME Journal 8, pp. 953 - 962 (2014)

Book Chapter (1)

2010
Book Chapter
Bohl, K.; de Figueiredo, L. F.; Hädicke, O.; Klamt, S.; Kost, C.; Schuster, S.; Kaleta, C.: CASOP GS: Computing intervention strategies targeted at production improvement in genome-scale metabolic networks. In: Proceedings of the 25th German Conference on Bioinformatics, pp. 71 - 80 (Eds. Schomburg, D.; Grote, A.). Gesellschaft f. Informatik, Bonn (2010)
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