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Elisabeth Fritsch

Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig

Publishes on Geological and Geochemical Analysis, Tuberculosis Research and Epidemiology, Avian ecology and behavior. 7 papers and 130.1k citations.

7Publications
130.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual
Cited by 130k

Molecular Cloning has served as the foundation of technical expertise in labs worldwide for 30 years. No other manual has been so popular, or so influential. Molecular Cloning, Fourth Edition, by the celebrated founding author Joe Sambrook and new co-author, the distinguished HHMI investigator Michael Green, preserves the highly praised detail and clarity of previous editions and includes specific chapters and protocols commissioned for the book from expert practitioners at Yale, U Mass, Rockefeller University, Texas Tech, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Washington University, and other leading institutions. The theoretical and historical underpinnings of techniques are prominent features of the presentation throughout, information that does much to help trouble-shoot experimental problems. For the fourth edition of this classic work, the content has been entirely recast to include nucleic-acid based methods selected as the most widely used and valuable in molecular and cellular biology laboratories. Core chapters from the third edition have been revised to feature current strategies and approaches to the preparation and cloning of nucleic acids, gene transfer, and expression analysis. They are augmented by 12 new chapters which show how DNA, RNA, and proteins should be prepared, evaluated, and manipulated, and how data generation and analysis can be handled. The new content includes methods for studying interactions between cellular components, such as microarrays, next-generation sequencing technologies, RNA interference, and epigenetic analysis using DNA methylation techniques and chromatin immunoprecipitation. To make sense of the wealth of data produced by these techniques, a bioinformatics chapter describes the use of analytical tools for comparing sequences of genes and proteins and identifying common expression patterns among sets of genes. Building on thirty years of trust, reliability, and authority, the fourth edition of Mol

The Musculus splenius capitis of hummingbirds <i>Trochilidae</i>
Cited by 15

The peculiar crossover origin of the cervical Musculus splenius capitis was studied in 32 hummingbird species. In this avian family the cruciform neck muscle exhibits extreme intra‐ and interspecific variations independent of age, thus taxa clustering for phylogenetical purposes according to the muscle's distinctive features is impossible. It is argued that the Musculus splenius capitis serves primarily to control precisely fast sideward head movements of hummingbirds while they are preying on insects.