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Identification and functional analysis of inherited variation in the CYP3A4 gene regulatory regionHamzeiy, Hossein January 2002 (has links)
No description available.
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Genetic diversity in the Leishmania donovani complexMauricio, Isabel Larguinho January 2000 (has links)
The Leishmania donovani complex comprises four described species: L. donovani, L. archibaldi, L. infantum and L. chagasi. L. chagasi is the only New World species and has been considered similar to L. infantum, although some authors insist on maintenance of its independent species status. L. donovani has at least two major epidemiological subgroups whose relationships are poorly understood. In this thesis, molecular biological techniques were used to investigate the taxonomy and phylogenetic relationships within the L. donovani complex, with isoenzyme analysis (lEA) as reference technique. Random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD) was used to provide anonymous genetic markers which allowed overall comparisons of genomes. Selected target genes and intergenic regions were also amplified by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR), namely the major surface protease (msp or gp63), the mini-exon and the ribosomal internal transcribed spacer (ITS). PCR products of intergenic regions between msp genes (ITG/CS and ITG/L), mini-exon and ITS were analysed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP). Phylogenies generated from each of the methods were compared with that of IEA. L. infantum and L. chagasi were found to be synonymous, whilst L. donovani was found to be more polymorphic than L. infantum and a fourth possible species in the complex, L. archibaldi, was not supported. Six genetic groups of strains were identified in the L. donovani complex, based on all DNA based analyses, which agreed with IEA typing. Pooled data from RFLP and RAPD analyses generated robust phylogenies which were congruent with ITG/CS RFLP and msp DNA sequence based phylogenies, but not with lEA phylogenies. The evolutionary history of the L. donovani complex is analysed in the light of the present results. The diverse typing methods were also evaluated and genetic markers suggested, that are applicable to classification and typing of L. donovani species and strains.
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Characterization of Polymorphic and Blended Drugs by Physical-analytical PropertiesMunigeti, Rajgopal January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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A molecular genetic study of inherited movement disordersJarman, Paul Richard January 1999 (has links)
No description available.
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Ribosomal RNA genes and RAPD for Cryptosporidium species and subspecies discriminationPatel, Sushma M. January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
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Population structure and genetics of the European lobster Homarus gammarusHughes, Greta January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Operational semantics and polymorphic type inferenceTofte, Mads January 1988 (has links)
Three languages with polymorphic type disciplines are discussed, namely the λ-calculus with Milner's polymorphic type discipline; a language with imperative features (polymorphic references); and a skeletal module language with structures, signatures and functors. In each of the two first cases we show that the type inference system is consistent with an operational dynamic semantics. On the module level, polymorphic types correspond to signatures. There is a notion of principal signature. So-called signature checking is the module level equivalent of type checking. In particular, there exists an algorithm which either fails or produces a principal signature.
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The Effect of Amino Acids on the Polymorphic Crystallization of Calcium CarbonateHouston, William Norman 04 1900 (has links)
<p> The presence of 0.10 moles/l. of glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid or leucine in a saturated bicarbonate solution will promote the formation of aragonitic calcium carbonate at 25.2°C. Magnesium ion, with or without an amino acid, also promotes the formation of aragonite. With increased amino acid concentration glutamic acid and alanine tend to promote the formation of more calcitic calcium carbonate, glycine and valine tend to promote the formation of more aragonitic calcium carbonate. Lysine and alanine show an increased tendency to form calcite at higher ionic strengths (.20) whereas glutamic acid shows the reverse. Some correlation with solubility and equilibrium constants for magnesium-amino acid complexes is indicated.</p> / Thesis / Candidate in Philosophy
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The expression and distribution of insertionally polymorphic endogenous retroviruses in canine cancer derived cell lines.Jarosz, Abigail S. 23 July 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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Dna Profiling of Captive Roseate Spoonbill (Ajaia Ajaja) Populations As a Mechanism of Determining Lineage in Colonial Nesting Birds.Sawyer, Gregory M. 05 1900 (has links)
Roseate spoonbills are colonial nesting birds with breeding grounds extending from the United States Gulf coast to the pampas of Argentina. The U.S. population suffered a severe bottleneck from 1890 to 1920. The population's recovery was slow and partially credited to migrations from Mexican rookeries, but a gene pool reduction would be expected. Five polymorphic Spoonbill autosomal short tandem repeat (STR) loci [three (GAT)n, one (AAAG)n and one (GT)n] and one Z/W-linked microsatellite exhibiting sex-specific dimorphism were isolated and characterized. The Z/W-linked STR locus accurately confirmed the sex of each bird. Allelic profiles for 51 spoonbills obtained from Dallas (Texas), Fort Worth (Texas) and Sedgwick County (Kansas) zoos revealed a non-continuous distribution of allele frequencies, consistent with the effects of a population bottleneck. Allelic frequencies also differed significantly between the isolated zoo populations. Although extra-pair copulations were suspected and difficult to document, zoos commonly used observational studies of mating pairs to determine familial relationships among adults and offspring. STR parentage analysis of recorded family relationships excluded one or both parents in 10/25 cases studied and it was further possible to identify alternative likely parents in each case. Mistaken familial relationships quickly lead to the loss of genetic variability in captive populations. Here, a decreased heterozygosity (HO) in 2nd generation captive-bred birds was observed at 3 out of 4 loci evaluated. Although these results could not be statistically validated because of the small number of individuals available for study (15 wild birds with no offspring vs. eight 2nd generation captive birds), they are considered biologically important, as decreased HO is an indicator of inbreeding and this apparent decrease occurred within two generations of removal from the wild. Collectively, the evidence obtained from this study suggests that captive spoonbill populations are experiencing rapid loss of diversity from an already depleted wild gene pool.
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