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A molecular marker map for roses - Wageningen UR E
A molecular marker map for roses - Wageningen UR E

... from both parents, 321 could be placed on seven linkage groups (data not shown). The female parent 93/1-117 contributed 129, the male parent 93/1-119 contributed 155 markers to the data set (Table 1). A relatively large number of 81 markers (22%) segregate from both parents (Table 1). This is most p ...
MetaXcan: Summary Statistics Based Gene-Level
MetaXcan: Summary Statistics Based Gene-Level

... multiple complex traits. However, the mechanistic understanding of these discoveries is still limited, hampering the translation of this knowledge into actionable targets. Studies of enrichment of expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs) among trait-associated variants [1,2] show the importance of ...
Campbell`s Biology: Concepts and Connections, 7e (Reece et al
Campbell`s Biology: Concepts and Connections, 7e (Reece et al

... 5) Which of the following statements regarding cross-breeding and hybridization is false? A) The offspring of two different varieties are called hybrids. B) The parental plants of a cross are the P generation. C) The hybrid offspring of a cross are the P1 generation. D) The hybrid offspring of an F ...
TBK1 Gene Duplication and Normal
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... factors are observed in healthy individuals; however, they are more commonly detected in patients with POAG than in healthy controls. Each of these genetic factors contributes a small risk for POAG, and although none may cause the disease on their own, in combination they may lead to the development ...
Chapter 27 Phage Strategies
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The Nucleotide and Derived Amino Acid
The Nucleotide and Derived Amino Acid

... apo-A-IV contained 376 residues. Throughout most of quence and organization of the docosapeptide units are reits length, human apo-A-IVwas found to contain mul- markably homologous to the tandemly repeated segments tiple tandem 22-residue repeated segments having am- found in apo-A-I (7,9),which sug ...
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AP Biology Meiosis Chapter 13 Guided Notes
AP Biology Meiosis Chapter 13 Guided Notes

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Genetics and Prostate Cancer

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Plasticity has a genetic basis

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3DNA Printer: A Tool for Automated DNA Origami
3DNA Printer: A Tool for Automated DNA Origami

... is an open source implemented in java while DAEDALUS is an open source implemented in MATLAB, which is not an open source even though it is free to use. We have slightly modified the algorithm used in DAEDALUS for efficiency. This software basically takes in the .obj file of any 3d shape (current ve ...
The quantitative genetic basis of polyandry in the parasitoid wasp
The quantitative genetic basis of polyandry in the parasitoid wasp

... male hybrids (Beukeboom and Van den Assem, 2001; Beukeboom and Van den Assem, 2002). In a series of experiments, hybrid males tended to resemble their maternal grandfathers in terms of courtship phenotype (since males are haploid, they do not have paternal grandfathers, only maternal grandfathers). ...
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MHC Recognition MHC Recognition DuPont Essay Rough Draft

... as a means of efficiently raising their young. By communally nursing, parents are able to care for their young with less if not no effort at all. What is communal nesting So how does MHC play a role? MHC affects kin recognition leading kin to nest together and nonrelatives to mate. The world of mice ...
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Inheritance Pattern of Sex-Linked Trait and

... Key words: Drosophila, selection, mating design, behaviour. ...
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Comparison between Human and Mouse genomes

... The tissue, organ or anatomical system from which the sample was prepared. Examples are digestive, lung and retina. The precise cell type from which a sample was prepared. Examples are: Blymphocyte, fibroblast and oocyte. ...
Technical standards and guidelines for reproductive screening in
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... of the 5.7 million Jews in the United States are classified as Ashkenazi Jewish. Historically, this population has been interested in and willing to participate in genetic carrier testing programs, beginning over 30 years ago with the introduction of Tay-Sachs disease (TSD) enzymatic screening in th ...
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Mapping strategies for sequence reads (with focus on RNA-seq)

... uires a set of known junctions from the reference ond, the QPALMA pipeline’s initial mapping phase ...
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Annotation Instruction Sheet A. Information for Beginning Annotators

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The humble ancestors of almost every living thing
The humble ancestors of almost every living thing

... heard of them. Nevertheless, archaea form one of the three main groups of life on earth. Eukaryotes (“cells with a nucleus”), bacteria, archaea. Archaea are micro-organisms. Under a microscope they resemble bacteria, but they actually are as distantly related to bacteria as we are. In 1977, American ...
Interfering RNA
Interfering RNA

... • showing of antisense targets across mRNA may be sufficient, but not all antisense targets are open to siRNA • intron targets may not be active for siRNA but may be for antisense – identify all elements claimed and their support in the description – identify species explicitly or implicitly disclos ...
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Microevolution

Microevolution is the change in allele frequencies that occur over time within a population. This change is due to four different processes: mutation, selection (natural and artificial), gene flow, and genetic drift. This change happens over a relatively short (in evolutionary terms) amount of time compared to the changes termed 'macroevolution' which is where greater differences in the population occur.Population genetics is the branch of biology that provides the mathematical structure for the study of the process of microevolution. Ecological genetics concerns itself with observing microevolution in the wild. Typically, observable instances of evolution are examples of microevolution; for example, bacterial strains that have antibiotic resistance.Microevolution over time leads to speciation or the appearance of novel structure, sometimes classified as macroevolution. Macro and microevolution describe fundamentally identical processes on different scales.
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