• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 7393
  • 1379
  • 1320
  • 1044
  • 1044
  • 1044
  • 1044
  • 1044
  • 1042
  • 445
  • 404
  • 270
  • 138
  • 57
  • 56
  • Tagged with
  • 17444
  • 3771
  • 2502
  • 2386
  • 1720
  • 1164
  • 1081
  • 1053
  • 1046
  • 965
  • 857
  • 827
  • 690
  • 584
  • 576
  • 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.
241

Chromosome pairing and the isolation of "2-chromosome, double interchanges" in barley, Hordeum vulgare L.

Fastnaught, Christine Elizabeth January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
242

Effects of Selection and Demography on DNA Polymorphism in Black Mustard (Brassica nigra)

Sjödin, Per January 2006 (has links)
The evolution of three genes from the CONSTANS-LIKE gene family is studied in Brassica nigra. We use a combination of population genetic and phylogenetic techniques in order to assess the relative importance of selection and demography on the pattern of DNA variation. The analysis is complicated by the fact that they are recent duplicates of each other and hence there is a potential redundancy factor that has to be considered. The relationship between two of the genes, COa and COb, is however much closer than between any relationship to the third gene, COL1. The three genes are all suspected to play a part in the natural variation of flowering time of B. nigra. The thesis consists of four papers. The first paper is a technical paper concerning when and if the existence of an effective population size can be assumed. More specifically, the impact of population structure and a fluctuating (census) population size on the standard coalescent is studied. The second paper is a population genetic study of B. nigra using micro-satellites and RFLP. The resulting population genetic structure is argued to reflect the early spread of agriculture in Europe. In the third paper the general evolution of the three genes is studied. We find that not all aspects of the data could be accounted for by demography or redundancy effects, but that selection most likely played a part in the evolution of these genes. The fourth paper concerns the functional status of COb, whether it is a pseudogene or not. The most likely scenario is that COb recently became non-functional due to the fixation of a deleterious mutation during a recent bottleneck.
243

Effects of epistatic interaction on detection and parameter analysis of quantitative trait loci

Wambach, Tina. January 2001 (has links)
Recent scientific support for the involvement of genetic locus interaction in quantitative trait variation and the widespread use of quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping has resulted in the need to examine those aspects concurrently. Computer software was written to simulate interacting quantitative trait loci (QTLs) in plant populations. Using this software, interacting QTLs were simulated to examine effects of epistasis on the detection of QTLs and the quality of QTL parameter estimates. Simulations involved doubled haploid populations exhibiting two non-epistatic traits and seven epistatic traits, each trait at four levels of heritability. Detection efficiency of QTL main and interaction effects decreased with decreasing heritability. At a given level of broad-sense heritability, traits differed with respect to the relative quality of main-effect detection and interaction-effect detection. Main-effect detection was notably poor for one epistatic locus that has a relatively small additive effect. Position estimates were accurate but their precision deteriorated with decreasing heritability. The quality of QTL effect estimates declined consistently with decreasing heritability, and loss in the accuracy was associated with losses in power of detection.
244

Genes in space : selection, association and variation in spatially structured populations

Mathieson, Iain January 2013 (has links)
Spatial structure in a population creates distinctive patterns in genetic data. There are two reasons to model this process. First, since the genetic structure of a population is induced by its historical spatial structure, it can be used to make inference about history and demography. Second, these models provide corrections to other analyses that are confounded by spatial structure. Since is it is now common to collect genome-wide data on many thousands of samples, a major challenge is to develop fast, scalable, approximate algorithms that can analyse these datasets. A practical approach is to focus on subsets of the data that are most informative, for example rare variants. First we look at the problem of estimating selection coefficients in spatially structured populations. We demonstrate this approach using classical datasets of moth colour morph frequencies, and then use it in a model incorporating both ancient and modern DNA to estimate the selective advantage of one of the best known examples of local adaptation in humans, lactase persistence in Europeans. Next, we turn to the problem of association studies in spatially structured populations. We demonstrate that rare variants are more confounded by non-genetic risk than common variants. Excess confounding is a consequence of the fact that rare variants are highly in- formative about recent ancestry and therefore, in a spatially explicit model, about location. Finally, we use this insight into rare variants to develop methods for inference about population history using rare variant and haplotype sharing as simple summary statistics. These approaches are extremely fast and can be applied to genome-wide data on thousands of samples, yet they provide an accurate description of the history of a population, both identifying recent ancestry and estimating migration rates between subpopulations.
245

Effects of irradiation on black antennapedia mutants of Trilobium castaneum

Yamada, Ellen K. 01 January 1978 (has links)
No description available.
246

Molecular and evolutionary analysis of a gene conserved in most Orthopoxviruses

Douglass, Nicola Jennifer 13 July 2017 (has links)
Evidence is presented to show that variola and monkeypox viruses evolved independently from a common ancestor. An open reading frame (ORF), potentially coding for a protein of 341 amino acid residues, was found to be conserved in two strains of variola virus (Harvey and Somalia), but degenerate in the Denmark strain of monkeypox virus. Monkeypox virus had a deletion of 391 bp, two 24bp deletions and a single base pair deletion within the coding region of this single copy ORF. The ORF corresponds to the E5R ORF in the published sequence of the Copenhagen strain of vaccinia virus, and the DNA sequence was determined for an additional strain of vaccinia virus, Dairen. A number of other Orthopoxviruses were found to contain this ORF, strengthening confidence in its presence in an ancestral Orthopoxvirus. The equivalent DNA sequence was determined for a number of monkeypox virus strains from West and Central Africa. The Denmark strain was identical to one from Liberia, indicating that this virus probably originated from West Africa. A third virus from West Africa, Benin, was found to have >99% base similarity and the same pattern of deletions as the other two monkeypox viruses. The Zaire strains were identical to one another and different from the West African strains. Like the West African strains, they contained the two 24bp deletions and single base pair deletion. In place of the large deletion they had three smaller deletions of 5-, 9- and 127-bp as well as a single base pair insertion. They also had additional deletions of land 2-bp and an insertion of 3bp. The West African strains have the potential to code for a truncated gene product of 107 amino acid residues, whereas the Zaire strains have no significant ORF. This clearly shows that monkeypox virus has diverged into two geographically isolated groups (Zaire and West Africa). There was >99% base similarity between the two groups, suggesting that the divergence occurred recently. Phylogenetic analysis, by the neighbour-joining method, was undertaken on the corresponding DNA sequences from variola (2 strains), monkeypox (6 strains), vaccinia (1 strain + 2 published sequences), cowpox (2 strains), taterapox, camel pox and ectromelia viruses. For every species gerbilpox virus was the nearest neighbour, suggesting that taterapox virus may be the species most closely related to the common ancestral Orthopoxvirus. Within the variola and cowpox virus species there was >99% DNA sequence conservation. Between species, camelpox virus was the most closely related species to gerbilpox virus, with variola virus, and, more distantly, vaccinia virus, falling into the same group. Cowpox virus was the most diverged species examined. Ectromelia virus shared a branch with cowpox virus. A comparison was made of the intergenic DNA sequence between this ORF and the adjacent downstream ORF. Variation was found, both within and between species, in the form of insertions and deletions. The interrelationships between the different Orthopoxvirus species more or less parallels that of the E5R-equivalent comparison. Some of the viruses had clusters of direct repeats. A pentameric repeated unit was found in 2, 10 and 17 copies in camelpox, gerbilpox and ectromelia viruses respectively. Raccoon poxvirus had a 7bp unit in 13 adjacent copies. The two cowpox viruses had a more complex arrangement of repeated sequences. It was thought that the ESR ORF may prove to be nonessential for virus replication. This was tested by interruption of the E5R gene in vaccinia virus; this did not affect the ability of the virus to form plaques in cell culture, but appeared to reduce the pathogenicity of the 'virus for rabbits. The deduced amino acid sequences were analysed for conserved and variable regions within the gene, to which no specific function has yet been assigned.
247

Effects of epistatic interaction on detection and parameter analysis of quantitative trait loci

Wambach, Tina. January 2001 (has links)
No description available.
248

MALE TRANSMISSION OF THE EXTRA CHROMOSOME OF BALANCED TERTIARY TRISOMICS OF BARLEY (HORDEUM VULGARE L.)

Lehmann, Louis Carl, 1937- January 1972 (has links)
No description available.
249

The linkage relations of six factor loci in guinea pigs

Blunn, Cecil Thomas January 2011 (has links)
Typescript, etc. / Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
250

Co-ordination of replication initiation with transcriptional regulation in Escherichia coli

Musuri Periasamy, Vigneshbabu 20 February 2016 (has links)
<p>In Escherichia coli, replication initiates when the DnaA-ATP protein assembles at the origin oriC. Hda protein in complex with the beta sliding clamp protein (? clamp) on DNA, functions in altering the nucleotide bound form of the replication initiator DnaA protein from DnaA-ATP to DnaA-ADP in a process termed as Regulatory Inactivation of DnaA (RIDA). DnaA also functions as a transcription factor of several genes including the aerobic ribonucleotide reductase nrdAB genes. In this study, I have exploited the cold sensitive growth phenotype due to loss of Hda function and its suppressors to understand the Hda function beyond initiation of replication. I describe the global transcriptional changes in strains lacking Hda and suppressed by two different modes. Loss of Hda function results in reduced expression of nrdAB genes, altered thiol status of the cell, SOS induction and increase in iron import due to de-repression of the Fur regulon. Strains lacking Hda function have increased requirement for the RpoH mediated heat shock response that affects the activity of NrdAB. I have shown that oversupply of ? clamp results in a slow growth phenotype which is more pronounced at low temperatures. Six mutant ? clamps suppress this slow growth phenotype. One of the mutant clamp that has the E202K mutation displays a hyper-Hda phenotypes such as hydroxyurea resistance and increase in nrdAB expression. These phenotypes were dependent on Hda but independent of SOS response. Finally, the slow growth phenotype due to overexpression of ? clamp can be compensated by co-overproducing Hda. This leads to a model where ? clamp could recruit Hda as a response to replication defects independent of SOS response.

Page generated in 0.0239 seconds