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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

Novel bioinformatics tools for elementary repeat assembly, repeat domain discovery, and TE-based analysis of substitution rates

Liu, Xiaolin 03 May 2018 (has links)
No description available.
2

Phylogenetic Support and Chloroplast Genome Evolution in Sileneae (Caryophyllaceae)

Erixon, Per January 2006 (has links)
Evolutionary biology is dependent on accurate phylogenies. In this thesis two branch support methods, Bayesian posterior probablities and bootstrap frequencies, were evaluated with simulated data and empirical data from the chloroplast genome. Bayesian inference was found to be more powerful and less conservative than maximum likelihood bootstrapping, but considerably more sensitive to choice of parameters. Bayesian inference increased in power when data were underparameterized, but the associated increase in type I error was comparatively larger. The chloroplast DNA phylogeny of the tribe Sileneae (Caryophyllaceae) was inferred by analysis of 33,149 aligned nucleotide bases representing 24 taxa. The position of the SW Anatolian taxa Silene cryptoneura and S. sordida strongly disagreed with previous studies on nuclear DNA sequence data, and indicate a possible case of homoploid hybrid origin. Silene atocioides and S. aegyptiaca formed a sister group to Lychnis and remaining Silene, thus suggesting that Silene may be paraphyletic, despite recent revisions based on molecular data. Several nodes in the phylogeny remained poorly supported, despite large amounts of data. Additional sequence sampling is not expected to solve this problem. The main reason for poor resolution is probably a combination of rapid radiation and substitution rate hererogeneity. Apparent incongruent patterns between different regions of the chloroplast genome are evaluated with ancient interspecific chloroplast recombination as explanatory model. Extremely elevated substitution rates in the exons of the plastid clpP gene was documented in Oenothera and three separate lineages of Sileneae. Introns have been lost in some of the lineages, but where present, intron sequences have a markedly slower substitution rate, similar to the rates found in other introns of their genomes. Three branches in the phylogeny show significant whole gene positive selection. In two of the lineages multiple partial copies of the gene were found.
3

Birds as a Model for Comparative Genomic Studies

Künstner, Axel January 2011 (has links)
Comparative genomics provides a tool to investigate large biological datasets, i.e. genomic datasets. In my thesis I focused on inferring patterns of selection in coding and non-coding regions of avian genomes. Until recently, large comparative studies on selection were mainly restricted to model species with sequenced genomes. This limitation has been overcome with advances in sequencing technologies and it is now possible to gather large genomic data sets for non-model species.  Next-generation sequencing data was used to study patterns of nucleotide substitutions and from this we inferred how selection has acted in the genomes of 10 non-model bird species. In general, we found evidence for a negative correlation between neutral substitution rate and chromosome size in birds. In a follow up study, we investigated two closely related bird species, to study expression levels in different tissues and pattern of selection. We found that between 2% and 18% of all genes were differentially expressed between the two species. We showed that non-coding regions adjacent to genes are under evolutionary constraint in birds, which suggests that noncoding DNA plays an important functional role in the genome. Regions downstream to genes (3’) showed particularly high level of constraint. The level of constraint in these regions was not correlated to the length of untranslated regions, which suggests that other causes play also a role in sequence conservation. We compared the rate of nonsynonymous substitutions to the rate of synonymous substitutions in order to infer levels of selection in protein-coding sequences. Synonymous substitutions are often assumed to evolve neutrally. We studied synonymous substitutions by estimating constraint on 4-fold degenerate sites of avian genes and found significant evolutionary constraint on this category of sites (between 24% and 43%). These results call for a reappraisal of synonymous substitution rates being used as neutral standards in molecular evolutionary analysis (e.g. the dN/dS ratio to infer positive selection). Finally, the problem of sequencing errors in next-generation sequencing data was investigated. We developed a program that removes erroneous bases from the reads. We showed that low coverage sequencing projects and large genome sequencing projects will especially gain from trimming erroneous reads.
4

The effect of evolutionary rate estimation methods on correlations observed between substitution rates in models of evolution

Botha, Stephen Gordon 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MSc)--Stellenbosch University, 2012. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: see full text for abstract / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: sien volteks vir opsomming
5

Phylogenetic Relationships of Silene sect. Melandrium and Allied Taxa (Caryophyllaceae), as Deduced from Multiple Gene Trees

Rautenberg, Anja January 2009 (has links)
This thesis focuses on phylogenetic relationships among some of the major lineages in Silene subgenus Behenantha (Caryophyllaceae) using DNA sequences from multiple, potentially unlinked gene regions from a large taxonomic and geographic sample. Both traditional phylogenetic analyses and a strategy to infer species trees and gene trees in a joint approach are used. A new strategy to optimize species classifications, based on the likelihoods of the observed gene trees, is presented. Silene latifolia, S. dioica and the other dioecious species previously classified in section Elisanthe are not closely related to the type of the section (S. noctiflora). The correct name for the group of dioecious species is section Melandrium. The chloroplast DNA data presented indicate a geographic, rather than a taxonomic, structure in section Melandrium. The nuclear genes investigated correlate more to the current taxonomy, although hybridization has likely been influencing the relationships within section Melandrium. Incongruence between different parts of the gene SlXY1 in two Silene lineages is investigated, using phylogenetic methods and a novel probabilistic, multiple primer-pair PCR approach. The incongruence is best explained by ancient hybridization and recombination events. A survey of mitochondrial substitution rate variation in Sileneae is presented. Silene section Conoimorpha, S. noctiflora and the closely related S. turkestanica have elevated synonymous substitution rates in the mitochondrial genes investigated. Morphological and phylogenetic data reject that the Californian S. multinervia should be treated as a synonym to the Asian S. coniflora, as has previously been suggested. Furthermore, none of the genes investigated, or a chromosome count, support the inclusion of S. multinervia in section Conoimorpha. Data from multiple genes suggest that S. noctiflora and S. turkestanica form a sister group to section Conoimorpha. The calyx nervature, which is a potential synapomorphy for S. multinervia and section Conoimorpha, may be explained either by parallelism or by sorting effects.
6

Consequences of Insect Flight Loss for Molecular Evolutionary Rates and Diversification

Mitterboeck, T. Fatima 25 May 2012 (has links)
This thesis investigates the molecular evolutionary and macroevolutionary consequences of flight loss in insects. Chapter 2 tests the hypothesis that flightless groups have smaller effective population sizes than related flighted groups, expected to result in a consistent pattern of increased non-synonymous to synonymous ratios in flightless lineages due to the greater effect of genetic drift in smaller populations. Chapter 3 tests the hypothesis that reduced dispersal and species-level traits such as range size associated with flightlessness increase extinction rates, which over the long term will counteract increased speciation rates in flightless lineages, leading to lower net diversification. The wide-spread loss of flight in insects has led to increased molecular evolutionary rates and is associated with decreased long-term net diversification. I demonstrate that the fundamental trait of dispersal ability has shaped two forms of diversity—molecular and species—in the largest group of animals, and that microevolutionary and macroevolutionary patterns do not necessarily mirror each other. / Generously funded by NSERC with a Canada Graduate Scholarship and the Government of Ontario with an Ontario Graduate Scholarship to T. Fatima Mitterboeck; NSERC with a Discovery Grant to Dr. Sarah J. Adamowicz

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