Paul B. Rainey
Max Planck Society
235 Papers
1.2K Citations
Paul B. Rainey is an academic researcher from Max Planck Society. The author has contributed to research in topics: Biology & Pseudomonas fluorescens. The author has an hindex of 70, co-authored 222 publications. Previous affiliations of Paul B. Rainey include Massey University & Mansfield University of Pennsylvania.
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Papers
Genetic structure of the grey side-gilled sea slug (Pleurobranchaea maculata) in coastal waters of New Zealand
Yeşerin Yıldırım,Marti J. Anderson,Bengt Hansson,Selina Patel,Craig D. Millar,Paul B. Rainey +5 more
TL;DR: The genetic structure and demographic history of P. maculata populations from five principle locations in New Zealand are described based on extensive analyses of 12 microsatellite loci and the COI and CytB regions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA).
Comparison of Borrelia isolated from UK foci of Lyme disease
TL;DR: Restriction endonuclease digestion of linear borrelial chromosomal DNA showed that three isolates of UK Lyme disease spirochaetes differed markedly from each other and from published data for other isolates from North America and continental Europe.
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Notes on designing a partial genomic database: The PfSBW25 Encyclopaedia, a sequence database for Pseudomonas fluorescens SBW25.
TL;DR: Most of us feel, from time to time, that other authors have not acknowledged the work of the authors' own or other groups or have omitted to interpret important aspects of their own data.
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Towards an understanding of the population genetics of plant-colonizing bacteria
Bernhard Haubold,Paul B. Rainey +1 more
TL;DR: The chapter introduces bacterial population genetics and provokes microbial ecologists and phytopathologists to consider questions relating to the extent and significance of genetic variation within plant–colonizing bacterial populations.
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Microsatellite development for a tetrodotoxin-containing sea slug (Pleurobranchaea maculata)
TL;DR: Using 454 pyrosequencing data, 24 polymorphic microsatellite markers were identified for the grey side-gilled sea slug, Pleurobranchaea maculata, central to understanding the population biology and genetic structure of P. Maculata.
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