Lukas Wick, Postdoctoral fellow
Ph.D. (2001) Swiss Federal Institute for Environmental
Science & Technology, and Swiss Federal Institute of Technology,
Zurich, Switzerland
In March 2006, Lukas moved to head the Microbiology Department at the
Biosynth company in Switzerland.
Contact Information
Biosynth AG
Rietlistrasse 4
CH-9422 Staad
Switzerland
Phone:+41-71-858 20 20
Email: lukas.wick@biosynth.ch
Publications
- Wick, L. M., J. M. Rouillard, T. S. Whittam, E. Gulari,
J. M. Tiedje, and S. A. Hashsham. 2006. On-chip non-equilibrium
dissociation curves and dissociation rate constants as methods
to assess specificity of oligonucleotide probes.
Nucleic Acids Research 34:e26-e35
[PubMed link]
- Wick, L. M., W. Qi, D. W. Lacher, and T. S. Whittam. 2005.
Evolution of genomic content in the stepwise emergence of
Escherichia coli O157:H7. Journal of Bacteriology 187:1783-1791.
[PubMed link]
- Hashsham, S. A., L. M. Wick, J. M. Rouillard,
E. Gulari, and J. M. Tiedje. 2004. Potential of DNA microarrays
for developing parallel detection tools (PDTs) for microorganisms
relevant to biodefense and related research needs.
Biosensors and Bioelectronics 20:668-683.
[PubMed link]
- Wick, L. M. and T. Egli. 2004. Molecular components of
physiological stress responses in Escherichia coli. Advances in Biochemical
Engineering/Biotechnology 89: 1-45.
[PubMed link]
- Wick, L. M., H. Weilenmann and T. Egli. 2002. The apparent clock-like
evolution of Escherichia coli in glucose-limited chemostats is reproducible at
large but not at small population sizes and can be explained with Monod kinetics.
Microbiology 148:2889-2902.
[PubMed link]
- Wick, L. M., M. Quadroni and T. Egli. 2001. Short- and long-term
changes in proteome composition and kinetic properties in a culture of
Escherichia coli during transition from glucose-excess to glucose-limited
growth conditions in continuous culture and vice versa.
Environmental Microbiology 3:588-599.
[PubMed link]