22 research outputs found

    LANDMAP: Serving Satellite imagery to the UK academic Community

    Get PDF
    The LANDMAP Project has created the first IfSAR DEM covering the entire British Isles. That DEM and associated orthorectified ERS images were used to produce a set of orthorectified images of the British Isles from LANDSAT and SPOT. Additional merged and mosaiced images were also created with the three different satellite products. The dataset includes images stored as files in Geo-TIFF format. This paper discusses the data creation process and presents the methods of serving these data to the user community

    High-Resolution Mapping of Gene Expression Using Association in an Outbred Mouse Stock

    Get PDF
    Quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis is a powerful tool for mapping genes for complex traits in mice, but its utility is limited by poor resolution. A promising mapping approach is association analysis in outbred stocks or different inbred strains. As a proof of concept for the association approach, we applied whole-genome association analysis to hepatic gene expression traits in an outbred mouse population, the MF1 stock, and replicated expression QTL (eQTL) identified in previous studies of F2 intercross mice. We found that the mapping resolution of these eQTL was significantly greater in the outbred population. Through an example, we also showed how this precise mapping can be used to resolve previously identified loci (in intercross studies), which affect many different transcript levels (known as eQTL β€œhotspots”), into distinct regions. Our results also highlight the importance of correcting for population structure in whole-genome association studies in the outbred stock

    Periodic Hematological Disorders

    No full text

    Studies on the Regulation of Granulopoiesis. I. The Response to Neutropenia

    No full text

    Interindividual Variation in Mitotic Recombination

    Get PDF
    Mitotic recombination (MR) between homologous chromosomes is a mutational event that results in loss of heterozygosity in half of the segregants at mitosis. Loss of heterozygosity may have important biological consequences. The purpose of this study was to describe human variation in the spontaneous frequency of MR. Using an immunoselection technique for isolating the somatic mutations that result in loss of expression of one of the codominant alleles at the HLA-A locus, we have measured the frequency and molecular basis of somatic mutations in lymphocytes from a population of young adults. Mutations were classified as being the result of intragenic changes, major deletions, or MR. Here we show that the MR mutation frequency in females was significantly greater than that in males but that intragenic mutation frequency showed no association with sex. Individual variation in MR frequency ranged over more than two orders of magnitude and was not normally distributed. Furthermore, the observed number of individuals from whom no mutants resulting from MR were obtained was significantly greater than was expected. The endogenous level of MR may be under genetic control. Given the association of loss of heterozygosity with cancer initiation and progression, low endogenous MR may confer a reduced lifetime risk of cancer, and the converse may apply
    corecore