Mark van der Giezen

Summary

Affiliation: University of Exeter
Country: UK

Publications

  1. ncbi The rise of oxygen and complex life
    Mark van der Giezen
    Centre for Eukaryotic Evolutionary Microbiology, Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, UK
    J Eukaryot Microbiol 59:111-3. 2012
  2. ncbi Hydrogenosomes and mitosomes: conservation and evolution of functions
    Mark van der Giezen
    Centre for Eukaryotic Evolutionary Microbiology, University of Exeter, UK
    J Eukaryot Microbiol 56:221-31. 2009
  3. ncbi Mitosomes in trophozoites and cysts of the reptilian parasite Entamoeba invadens
    Maria A Siegesmund
    Centre for Eukaryotic Evolutionary Microbiology, Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom
    Eukaryot Cell 10:1582-5. 2011

Collaborators

  • Maria A Siegesmund
  • Adrian B Hehl

Detail Information

Publications3

  1. ncbi The rise of oxygen and complex life
    Mark van der Giezen
    Centre for Eukaryotic Evolutionary Microbiology, Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, UK
    J Eukaryot Microbiol 59:111-3. 2012
    ..It could explain the widespread distribution of anaerobic biochemistry in every eukaryotic supergroup: anaerobic biochemistry is hard-wired into the eukaryotes...
  2. ncbi Hydrogenosomes and mitosomes: conservation and evolution of functions
    Mark van der Giezen
    Centre for Eukaryotic Evolutionary Microbiology, University of Exeter, UK
    J Eukaryot Microbiol 56:221-31. 2009
    ..Different selection pressures operate on different organisms so there is no reason to suspect that their mitochondria should all be the same...
  3. ncbi Mitosomes in trophozoites and cysts of the reptilian parasite Entamoeba invadens
    Maria A Siegesmund
    Centre for Eukaryotic Evolutionary Microbiology, Biosciences, College of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter, United Kingdom
    Eukaryot Cell 10:1582-5. 2011
    ..Here, we show that the distantly related reptilian pathogen Entamoeba invadens contains mitosomes, in both trophozoites and cysts, suggesting all Entamoeba species contain these organelles...