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1. Depolymerization of biorefinery lignin by improved laccases of the white‐rot fungus Obba rivulosa

2. Production of Recombinant Laccase From Coprinopsis cinerea and Its Effect in Mediator Promoted Lignin Oxidation at Neutral pH

3. Maternal gut and breast milk microbiota affect infant gut antibiotic resistome and mobile genetic elements

4. Sulphonamide and trimethoprim resistance genes persist in sediments at Baltic Sea aquaculture farms but are not detected in the surrounding environment.

5. Bacteria contribute to sediment nutrient release and reflect progressed eutrophication-driven hypoxia in an organic-rich continental sea.

6. Sediment bacterial communities reflect the history of a sea basin.

7. Phosphorus chemistry and bacterial community composition interact in brackish sediments receiving agricultural discharges.

8. Antibiotic Resistomes and Microbiomes in the Surface Water along the Code River in Indonesia Reflect Drainage Basin Anthropogenic Activities

9. Sea-Ice Bacteria Halomonas sp. Strain 363 and Paracoccus sp. Strain 392 Produce Multiple Types of Poly-3-Hydroxyalkaonoic Acid (PHA) Storage Polymers at Low Temperature

10. Depolymerization of biorefinery lignin by improved laccases of the white-rot fungus Obba rivulosa

11. Maternal gut and breast milk microbiota affect infant gut antibiotic resistome and mobile genetic elements

12. Bacterial communities in Arctic first-year drift ice during the winter/spring transition

14. Aeromonas aquatica sp. nov., Aeromonas finlandiensis sp. nov. and Aeromonas lacus sp. nov. isolated from Finnish waters associated with cyanobacterial blooms

15. Evaluating the mobility potential of antibiotic resistance genes in environmental resistomes without metagenomics

16. Bacterial communities in Arctic first-year drift ice during the winter/spring transition

17. Fertilizing with Animal Manure Disseminates Antibiotic Resistance Genes to the Farm Environment

18. Aquaculture changes the profile of antibiotic resistance and mobile genetic element associated genes in Baltic Sea sediments

19. Genetic diversity in strains of the genus Anabaena isolated from planktonic and benthic habitats of the Gulf of Finland (Baltic Sea)

20. Strains of the cyanobacterial genera Calothrix and Rivularia isolated from the Baltic Sea display cryptic diversity and are distantly related to Gloeotrichia and Tolypothrix

21. Quantitative Real-Time PCR Detection of Toxic Nodularia Cyanobacteria in the Baltic Sea

22. Bacterial Diversity and Function in the Baltic Sea with an Emphasis on Cyanobacteria

23. Ice formation and growth shape bacterial community structure in Baltic Sea drift ice

24. Occurrence and toxicity of cyanobacterial blooms dominated by Anabaena lemmermannii P. Richter and Aphanizomenon spp. in boreal lakes in 2003

25. Paucibacter toxinivorans gen. nov., sp. nov., a bacterium that degrades cyclic cyanobacterial hepatotoxins microcystins and nodularin

26. Bacterial community dynamics and activity in relation to dissolved organic matter availability during sea-ice formation in a mesocosm experiment

27. Characterization of Nodularia strains, cyanobacteria from brackish waters, by genotypic and phenotypic methods

28. Sulphonamide and trimethoprim resistance genes persist in sediments at Baltic Sea aquaculture farms but are not detected in the surrounding environment

29. Bacteria Contribute to Sediment Nutrient Release and Reflect Progressed Eutrophication-Driven Hypoxia in an Organic-Rich Continental Sea

30. High-throughput quantification of antibiotic resistance genes from an urban wastewater treatment plant

31. Virulence genes of Aeromonas isolates, bacterial endotoxins and cyanobacterial toxins from recreational water samples associated with human health symptoms

32. Phosphorus chemistry and bacterial community composition interact in brackish sediments receiving agricultural discharges

33. Culture-independent evidence for the persistent presence and genetic diversity of microcystin-producing Anabaena (Cyanobacteria) in the Gulf of Finland

34. High-frequency transfer of linear DNA containing 5′-covalently linked terminal proteins: electroporation of bacteriophage PRD1 genome into Escherichia coli

35. Genetic diversity in strains of the genus Anabaena isolated from planktonic and benthic habitats of the Gulf of Finland (Baltic Sea)

36. Strains of the cyanobacterial genera Calothrix and Rivularia isolated from the Baltic Sea display cryptic diversity and are distantly related to Gloeotrichia and Tolypothrix

37. Detection of microcystin-producing cyanobacteria in Finnish lakes with genus-specific microcystin synthetase gene E (mcyE) PCR and associations with environmental factors

38. First report of saxitoxin in Finnish lakes and possible associated effects on human health

39. Benthic cyanobacteria of the genus Nodularia are non-toxic, without gas vacuoles, able to glide and genetically more diverse than planktonic Nodularia

40. Cellular fatty acids as chemotaxonomic markers of the genera Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Microcystis, Nostoc and Planktothrix (cyanobacteria)

41. Phylogenetic Comparison of the Cyanobacterial Genera Anabaena and Aphanizomenon

42. Sediment Bacterial Communities Reflect the History of a Sea Basin

43. First report of saxitoxin in Finnish lakes and possible associated effects on human health.

44. Molecular characterization of planktic cyanobacteria of Anabaena, Aphanizomenon, Microcystis and Planktothrix genera

45. Variation of microcystins, cyanobacterial hepatotoxins, in Anabaena spp. as a function of growth stimuli

46. Site-specific restriction endonucleases in cyanobacteria

47. Genome-derived insights into the biology of the hepatotoxic bloom-forming cyanobacterium Anabaena sp. strain 90

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