
IJBT 11(4) 412-415
... improvement due to crop cleanliness and easy incorporation in wheat germplasm. However, hypersensitive resistance genes lead to high selection pressure on the pathogen races and, thereby, evolution of new races. Breeders are increasingly focusing on identification and incorporation of non-hypersensi ...
... improvement due to crop cleanliness and easy incorporation in wheat germplasm. However, hypersensitive resistance genes lead to high selection pressure on the pathogen races and, thereby, evolution of new races. Breeders are increasingly focusing on identification and incorporation of non-hypersensi ...
Pleiotropy and the Genomic Location of Sexually Selected Genes
... initial estimates of approximately 120,000 genes, the human genome has now been reduced to approximately 30,000 genes (Lander et al. 2001; Venter et al. 2001). Pleiotropic effects may in part provide a mechanism to explain how such a reduced number of genes can produce animals as complex as humans. ...
... initial estimates of approximately 120,000 genes, the human genome has now been reduced to approximately 30,000 genes (Lander et al. 2001; Venter et al. 2001). Pleiotropic effects may in part provide a mechanism to explain how such a reduced number of genes can produce animals as complex as humans. ...
Analysis of Drosophila Species Genome Size and Satellite DNA
... nomes change their DNA content? Finally, and most interestingly, are such changes in eukaryotic genome size under selection? The availability of genome sequences, especially of closely related species such as the 12 Drosophila genomes, now make it possible to compare whole genomes and address some o ...
... nomes change their DNA content? Finally, and most interestingly, are such changes in eukaryotic genome size under selection? The availability of genome sequences, especially of closely related species such as the 12 Drosophila genomes, now make it possible to compare whole genomes and address some o ...
B genes - Feles Grata
... Is it connected to the warmth in colour?? I think I have observed that a deep, warm, intense colour at a nonsilver cat leads to a cold, clear, non-rufistic silver ofspring! ...
... Is it connected to the warmth in colour?? I think I have observed that a deep, warm, intense colour at a nonsilver cat leads to a cold, clear, non-rufistic silver ofspring! ...
TTEST – Between subjects
... the distribution of the test statistic. • The ability to dynamically alter the input parameters based on immediate visual feedback, even before completing the analysis, should make the data-mining ...
... the distribution of the test statistic. • The ability to dynamically alter the input parameters based on immediate visual feedback, even before completing the analysis, should make the data-mining ...
Identification of alternative spliced mRNA variants related to(1).
... This implies that new splicing variants might be generated during carcinogenesis This result supports the observation that during carcinogenesis not only is the expression profile affected but the splicing Patten BIOINFORMATICS ...
... This implies that new splicing variants might be generated during carcinogenesis This result supports the observation that during carcinogenesis not only is the expression profile affected but the splicing Patten BIOINFORMATICS ...
Nature With Nurture - College Test bank
... 20. Adoption studies have shown that A. the quality of an adoptive home has no effect on intelligence. B. genetic inheritance has no effect on intelligence. C. adopted children mostly resemble their biological parents’ levels of intelligence, but the environment also makes a difference. D. some chil ...
... 20. Adoption studies have shown that A. the quality of an adoptive home has no effect on intelligence. B. genetic inheritance has no effect on intelligence. C. adopted children mostly resemble their biological parents’ levels of intelligence, but the environment also makes a difference. D. some chil ...
Lecture 5
... • What organisms have the gene? • Where did the gene come from? • What happens to the gene once it’s there? Duplicate - tandem - mRNA can be inserted Lost ...
... • What organisms have the gene? • Where did the gene come from? • What happens to the gene once it’s there? Duplicate - tandem - mRNA can be inserted Lost ...
Integrated Analysis of Microarray Data and Gene Function Information.
... Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts ...
... Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts ...
From Communication to DNA Sequencing
... • Given a statistical model, what is the read length L and number of reads N needed to reconstruct with probability 1-ε ? ...
... • Given a statistical model, what is the read length L and number of reads N needed to reconstruct with probability 1-ε ? ...
1 An Introduction - ResearchOnline@JCU
... Reichert, 1998; Papaioannou, 2001). Paired-class genes, in particular those related to the Drosophila aristaless gene, are frequently involved in the development of the embryonic brain and specification of the CNS. Originally it was thought that the cnidarian ‘head’, with its mouth-like opening and ...
... Reichert, 1998; Papaioannou, 2001). Paired-class genes, in particular those related to the Drosophila aristaless gene, are frequently involved in the development of the embryonic brain and specification of the CNS. Originally it was thought that the cnidarian ‘head’, with its mouth-like opening and ...
Self-incompatibility: How to Stay Incompatible
... known as SCR or SP11 [1,2], which is recognised by a a receptor kinase, SRK, present on the surface of stigmatic papillae [3] where pollen grains must germinate to grow down to the ovary and fertilise the ovules. Incompatible pollen grains are generally blocked before germination in Brassica, but th ...
... known as SCR or SP11 [1,2], which is recognised by a a receptor kinase, SRK, present on the surface of stigmatic papillae [3] where pollen grains must germinate to grow down to the ovary and fertilise the ovules. Incompatible pollen grains are generally blocked before germination in Brassica, but th ...
Supplementary Data The complete 12 Mb genome and
... reported by contrasting rpoB(R)N426H strain to wild type strain data. Gene-sets with Normalized Enrichment Score (NES) > 1.70 and False Discovery Rate (FDR) < 0.1 in at least one of the contrasts are reported. Green and red colors indicate, respectively, up-regulation and down-regulation in test str ...
... reported by contrasting rpoB(R)N426H strain to wild type strain data. Gene-sets with Normalized Enrichment Score (NES) > 1.70 and False Discovery Rate (FDR) < 0.1 in at least one of the contrasts are reported. Green and red colors indicate, respectively, up-regulation and down-regulation in test str ...
Genome-scale CRISPR pooled screens
... powerful technique for rapidly identifying specific genome elements that influence a selected phenotype. A single successful screen may provide a treasure trove of new genotypeephenotype interactions that can be used as a launching point for follow-up studies on the most promising gene targets. The ke ...
... powerful technique for rapidly identifying specific genome elements that influence a selected phenotype. A single successful screen may provide a treasure trove of new genotypeephenotype interactions that can be used as a launching point for follow-up studies on the most promising gene targets. The ke ...
Evaluation of the phylogenetic position of the planctomycete
... Besides concatenation of protein sequences, three different methods to infer phylogeny from coding sequences of entire genomes have been developed in recent years. These methods are based on gene content (i.e. presence/absence of genes), gene order and normalized distances between orthologues (Wolf ...
... Besides concatenation of protein sequences, three different methods to infer phylogeny from coding sequences of entire genomes have been developed in recent years. These methods are based on gene content (i.e. presence/absence of genes), gene order and normalized distances between orthologues (Wolf ...
Multiple Testing Corrections
... correct for occurrence of false positives. In microarray data analysis, false positives are genes that are found to be statistically different between conditions, but are not in reality. B. Importance of Multiple testing corrections A typical microarray experiment measures several thousand genes sim ...
... correct for occurrence of false positives. In microarray data analysis, false positives are genes that are found to be statistically different between conditions, but are not in reality. B. Importance of Multiple testing corrections A typical microarray experiment measures several thousand genes sim ...
Additional file 1
... for Affymetrix human tiling array version 2 (hg18 assembly) of single replicate A generic ChIP-chip pipeline for NimbleGen tiling array of single replicate A generic ChIP-seq pipeline for Next Generation Sequencing platform data of single replicate Calculate correlation of two ChIP-seq replicates ...
... for Affymetrix human tiling array version 2 (hg18 assembly) of single replicate A generic ChIP-chip pipeline for NimbleGen tiling array of single replicate A generic ChIP-seq pipeline for Next Generation Sequencing platform data of single replicate Calculate correlation of two ChIP-seq replicates ...
Antibiotic resistance genes and identification of staphylococci
... tetracycline resistance determinants reveals a great diffusion of this type of resistance. The carriage of multiple tet genes was commonly found in individual Gram-positive bacteria (Schwarz et al., 1998; Huys et al., 2005; Rizzotti et al., 2005). The high incidence of tet(K) and tet(M) genes in the ...
... tetracycline resistance determinants reveals a great diffusion of this type of resistance. The carriage of multiple tet genes was commonly found in individual Gram-positive bacteria (Schwarz et al., 1998; Huys et al., 2005; Rizzotti et al., 2005). The high incidence of tet(K) and tet(M) genes in the ...
The Florida State University College of Arts and Sciences
... paramutation, where paramutation is the trans interaction of two alleles that results in alteration of the expression level of one allele in a meiotically heritable manner (Chandler 2010). The epigenetic transcriptional silencing of BTG occurs independently of paramutation and is therefore dependent ...
... paramutation, where paramutation is the trans interaction of two alleles that results in alteration of the expression level of one allele in a meiotically heritable manner (Chandler 2010). The epigenetic transcriptional silencing of BTG occurs independently of paramutation and is therefore dependent ...