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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Des mutations agro-pastorales à l'urbanisation dans le Maroc oriental

Tag, Boutayeb, January 1988 (has links)
Th.--Géogr.--Toulouse 2, 1987.
2

O Regionalismo nordestino : existência e consciência da desigualdade regional /

Silveira, Rosa Maria Godoy. January 1984 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Tese de doutoramento--Historia--São paolo, 1981. / Bibliogr. p. 239-248.
3

Das Verb im Chinesischen, Hmong, Vietnamesischen, Thai und Khmer : vergleichende Grammatik im Rahmen der Verbserialisierung, der Grammatikalisierung und der Attraktorpositionen /

Bisang, Walter. January 1900 (has links)
Diss.--Philosophische Fakultät I--Zürich--Universität, 1991.
4

Parallelisation of EST clustering

Ranchod, Pravesh 23 March 2006 (has links)
Master of Science - Science / The field of bioinformatics has been developing steadily, with computational problems related to biology taking on an increased importance as further advances are sought. The large data sets involved in problems within computational biology have dictated a search for good, fast approximations to computationally complex problems. This research aims to improve a method used to discover and understand genes, which are small subsequences of DNA. A difficulty arises because genes contain parts we know to be functional and other parts we assume are non-functional as there functions have not been determined. Isolating the functional parts requires the use of natural biological processes which perform this separation. However, these processes cannot read long sequences, forcing biologists to break a long sequence into a large number of small sequences, then reading these. This creates the computational difficulty of categorizing the short fragments according to gene membership. Expressed Sequence Tag Clustering is a technique used to facilitate the identification of expressed genes by grouping together similar fragments with the assumption that they belong to the same gene. The aim of this research was to investigate the usefulness of distributed memory parallelisation for the Expressed Sequence Tag Clustering problem. This was investigated empirically, with a distributed system tested for speed against a sequential one. It was found that distributed memory parallelisation can be very effective in this domain. The results showed a super-linear speedup for up to 100 processors, with higher numbers not tested, and likely to produce further speedups. The system was able to cluster 500000 ESTs in 641 minutes using 101 processors.
5

Comparative and Functional Analysis of Gene Expression in Ophiostoma Species

Robson, Lisa Marie January 2008 (has links)
Ophiostoma floccosum and Ophiostoma piliferum are polymorphic ascomycete fungi found throughout the world. Both species are important economically as they are known to colonise timber and cause discoloration of wood thus reducing its aesthetic value and subsequently price. Albino variants of the two species, in particular O. piliferum, are used as biological control agents to prevent sapstaining and have been used commercially for the past 15 years to reduce pitch/wood extractives in paper manufacturing. Other members of the genus include the plant pathogens O. novo-ulmi and O. clavigerum, known to have a severe effect on forest health and economy around the world. O. floccosum and O. piliferum have been demonstrated in the laboratory to be fermented in large volumes and they are particularly suitable as hosts capable of secreting extracellular recombinant proteins. This research aimed to investigate the transcriptome and molecular functioning of Ophiostoma floccosum and compare this to transcriptomic data available for Ophiostoma piliferum and other Ophiostoma species, O. novo-ulmi, O. clavigerum and O. piceae. This research contributes to the development of O. floccosum and O. piliferum as hosts for protein expression and advances the knowledge of gene expression and molecular functioning in this genus. To gain insight into the molecular functioning of O. floccosum, an expressed sequence tag (EST) collection from yeast-like growth (blastospores) was created during early phase growth. A total of 1207 EST sequences with an average length of 713 bp were identified. Clustering and assembly of the high-quality EST data set resulted in the identification of 598 unique putative transcripts (UPTs). Functional classification of these UPTs, using both homology searching and ab-initio methods, indicated that the majority of protein transcripts produced were involved in metabolism and cell proliferation. Up-regulation of mitochondrial transcripts involved in respiration and the presence of transcripts homologous to enzymes involved in the tri-carboxylic acid cycle indicated that aerobic respiration was likely the preferred method of ATP production in O. floccosum blastospores. However, the putative identification of genes encoding alcohol dehydrogenases within O. floccosum ESTs and the presence of homologues in other Ophiostoma species would suggest that these Ophiostoma species are also likely to be capable of metabolic functioning under anaerobic conditions. To identify homologous genes between Ophiostoma species, the O. floccosum EST data set was compared to 20,783 ESTs from other Ophiostoma species including O. piliferum, O. novo-ulmi, O. clavigerum and O. piceae. All UPTs identified within each of the datasets were aligned resulting in the identification of 347 clusters containing EST sequences from more than one Ophiostoma species. Six were identified that had homologues in all of the datasets excluding O. piceae. Three of the six homologous UPTs were predicted to function in core metabolism with two of the UPTs identified as encoding enzymes used in the glycolysis pathway and one encoding a 60S ribosomal protein. The other three homologous UPTs were thought to have a functional role in protein fate and were putatively identified as being a superoxide dismutase, heat-shock protein and a structural alpha-B chain tubulin gene. Of the 347 clusters, 86 of these contained transcripts identified in the O. floccosum EST datasets, and of these 86, only 10 fragments did not align with any significant homology to other fungal sequences contained in the NCBI non redundant database, indicating that the majority these transcripts are conserved in other fungal species. Predicted genes within the Ophiostoma EST datasets were also investigated to determine codon usage and to identify the presence of genes predicted to encode proteases. Both are important factors in recombinant protein expression. Protease production can severely inhibit the production of recombinant protein in fungal hosts. Based on sequence homology to known proteases, putative proteases were identified in all of the Ophiostoma species investigated with the exception of O. piceae. Homologues for all six peptidase groups were identified including a possible glutamic acid protease and proportionally high numbers of serine and metallo-protease homologues. This research constitutes the first reported findings of putative peptidases in the aspartic, cysteine, glutamic and threonine peptidase families in Ophiostoma species. Key to the over-expression of recombinant proteins is the optimisation of codons in a cloned gene to better utilise available tRNA species within the recombinant host. No codon bias was apparent between up-regulated and lower frequency transcripts in O. floccosum, O. piliferum, O. clavigerum and O. novo-ulmi. Codon usage was found to be consistent between these Ophiostoma species. However, a large difference between the codon usage in mitochondrially encoded genes compared to nuclear encoded genes in O. floccosum was indicated. To optimise the efficiency of a recombinant expression system, we sought to identify promoters in both O. floccosum and O. piliferum that may be applied to a vector system. Using EST data, the most up-regulated UPTs identified from O. floccosum and O. piliferum ESTs were a putative subunit 4 of the NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase protein (NADH-UR4) and a possible heat-shock protein (HSP), respectively. A unique hydrolase gene was also identified by molecular probing of O. floccosum genomic DNA. This putative 96 kd protein, called PLIP-Lg, was predicted to be a mitochondrial A1 phospholipase based on both nucleotide and predicted amino acid sequence structure and homology. These gene sequences were investigated using genome walking methods to further elucidate nucleotide sequences in the 5' and 3' directions. In silico investigation of the 5' promoter region of the genes identified a number of predicted transcription factor binding sites, including possible TATA boxes identified previously in the promoter region of an O. floccosum protein. Additionally, RT-PCR methods were used to compare the expression of these transcripts throughout growth in both the mycelial and blastospore forms. All three predicted genes were found to be transcribed throughout growth in both morphological forms and, thus, the use of their promoters in a vector system would not be limited to one morphology. However, the level of expression in blastospores compared to mycelial growth varied by up to 20 fold. Therefore, the morphological form of the fungi did influence the level of expression of these genes and is a factor for consideration for future promoter use. This PhD thesis research provides the first comprehensive investigation into gene expression and the transcriptome of O. floccosum while also providing the first comparative look into similarities between the transcriptomes of several Ophiostoma species. Subsequently, this research adds to the knowledge of metabolic functioning in Ophiostoma species and illustrates the usefulness of EST analysis in determining core molecular functioning within this group. Further to addressing these goals, the research will augment future research into various biotechnological applications for the genus, specifically the development of O. floccosum and O. piliferum as hosts for recombinant protein expression.
6

Die Protokolle der kirchlichen ostkonferenz, 1945-1949 /

Kühne, Michael. January 1900 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Dissertation--Naumburg-Saale--Kirchliche Hochschule, 1993. / Bibliogr. p. 423-439.
7

Contribution à l'histoire de la Thrace propontique durant la période archaïque /

Loukopoulou, Louïza D. January 1989 (has links)
Texte remanié de: Th.--Lettres--Lausanne, 1987. / Bibliogr. p. 11-24. Index.
8

Adlige Territorialpolitik in der Ostschweiz : kirchliche Stiftungen im Spannungsfeld früher landesherrlicher Verdrängungspolitik /

Eugster, Erwin. January 1900 (has links)
Diss.--Philosophische Fakultät--Zürich, 1989-1990. / Notes bibliogr. en bas de page. Bibliogr. p. 331-343.
9

Des Fellah algériens face aux transformations de l'agriculture le cas de la commune de Mila, Est algérien.

Ghedabna-Ferchichi, Yasmina, January 1987 (has links)
Th. 3e cycle--Géogr.--Toulouse 2, 1986.
10

Der Einfluß des deutsch-ostasiatischen Handels auf die Beschäftigungs-entwicklung in Deutschland : eine Analyse von sechs aufstrebenden Ländern Ost- und Südostasiens /

Rullhusen, Leif. January 2001 (has links)
Diss.--Universität Bremen, 2000. / Bibliogr. p. 231-244.

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