Metamenu
University of Vienna
CMESS
PhenDB
VOGDB
NVT
HoloVir
SIMAP
EffectiveDB
PICA
Gepard
GenSkew
LiSC
Upload
Search form
Search this site
Navigation
Home
News
People
Staff
Alumni
Research
Research topics
Software and databases
Computational resources
Supplementary data files
Publications
Staff
Category (field_tr_staff_category)
All
Faculty
Technician / Administration
Visiting Scientist
Scientists and postdocs
PhD students
Undergraduate students
Faculty
Prof. Dr. Thomas Rattei
University of Vienna
Head of the Division of Computational Systems Biology
Vice-head of the Department of Microbiology and Ecosystem Science
Germany
Phone:
+43 1 4277 91280
thomas.rattei@univie.ac.at
Dr. Adrian Tett
University of Vienna
United Kingdom
adrian.james.tett@univie.ac.at
Technician / Administration
Michael Neumayer
University of Vienna
Austria
michael.neumayer@univie.ac.at
Johann Dorn
University of Vienna
Austria
johann.dorn@univie.ac.at
Scientists and postdocs
Susana Ferreira
University of Vienna
Portugal
contact.cube@univie.ac.at
PhD students
Michael Predl
University of Vienna
Austria
michael.predl@univie.ac.at
Alexander Pfundner
University of Vienna
Austria
contact.cube@univie.ac.at
Roko Sango
University of Vienna
Croatia (Hrvatska)
contact.cube@univie.ac.at
Lukas Lüftinger
University of Vienna
Austria
contact.cube@univie.ac.at
Lovro Trgovec-Greif
University of Vienna
Croatia (Hrvatska)
lovro.trgovec-greif@univie.ac.at
People
Staff
Alumni
CUBE News
New paper in Nature clarifies controversy around foetal microbiome
25.01.23
Funding for “DataLife” Project: New node in European research infrastructure
23.12.22
Thomas Rattei is Highly Cited Researcher 2022
15.11.22
Latest publications
A time-resolved multi-omics atlas of Acanthamoeba castellanii encystment.
Genome-Wide Mutation Scoring for Machine-Learning-Based Antimicrobial Resistance Prediction.
Hallstatt miners consumed blue cheese and beer during the Iron Age and retained a non-Westernized gut microbiome until the Baroque period.
Predictive Antibiotic Susceptibility Testing by Next-Generation Sequencing for Periprosthetic Joint Infections: Potential and Limitations.
Genomic insights into diverse bacterial taxa that degrade extracellular DNA in marine sediments.
Contact
+43 1 4277 91281
+43 1 4277 891281
contact.cube@univie.ac.at