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Renzo Kottmann

Institut für Berufs- und Sozialpädagogik

Publishes on Genomics and Phylogenetic Studies, Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology, Environmental DNA in Biodiversity Studies. 84 papers and 4.5k citations.

84Publications
4.5kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

The antiSMASH database, a comprehensive database of microbial secondary metabolite biosynthetic gene clusters
Kai Blin, Marnix H. Medema, Renzo Kottmann et al.|Nucleic Acids Research|2016
Cited by 254Open Access

Secondary metabolites produced by microorganisms are the main source of bioactive compounds that are in use as antimicrobial and anticancer drugs, fungicides, herbicides and pesticides. In the last decade, the increasing availability of microbial genomes has established genome mining as a very important method for the identification of their biosynthetic gene clusters (BGCs). One of the most popular tools for this task is antiSMASH. However, so far, antiSMASH is limited to de novo computing results for user-submitted genomes and only partially connects these with BGCs from other organisms. Therefore, we developed the antiSMASH database, a simple but highly useful new resource to browse antiSMASH-annotated BGCs in the currently 3907 bacterial genomes in the database and perform advanced search queries combining multiple search criteria. antiSMASH-DB is available at http://antismash-db.secondarymetabolites.org/.

The Genomic Standards Consortium
Dawn Field, Linda Amaral-Zettler, Guy Cochrane et al.|PLoS Biology|2011
Cited by 238Open Access

A vast and rich body of information has grown up as a result of the world's enthusiasm for 'omics technologies. Finding ways to describe and make available this information that maximise its usefulness has become a major effort across the 'omics world. At the heart of this effort is the Genomic Standards Consortium (GSC), an open-membership organization that drives community-based standardization activities, Here we provide a short history of the GSC, provide an overview of its range of current activities, and make a call for the scientific community to join forces to improve the quality and quantity of contextual information about our public collections of genomes, metagenomes, and marker gene sequences.