429 research outputs found

    Genome-Wide Association Study of Genetic Control of Seed Fatty Acid Biosynthesis in Brassica napus

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    Fatty acids and their composition in seeds determine oil value for nutritional or industrial purposes and also affect seed germination as well as seedling establishment. To better understand the genetic basis of seed fatty acid biosynthesis in oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) we applied a genome-wide association study, using 91,205 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) characterized across a mapping population with high-resolution skimgenotyping by sequencing (SkimGBS). We identified a cluster of loci on chromosome A05 associated with oleic and linoleic seed fatty acids. The delineated genomic region contained orthologs of the Arabidopsis thaliana genes known to play a role in regulation of seed fatty acid biosynthesis such as Fatty acyl-ACP thioesterase B (FATB) and Fatty Acid Desaturase (FAD5). This approach allowed us to identify potential functional genes regulating fatty acid composition in this important oil producing crop and demonstrates that this approach can be used as a powerful tool for dissecting complex traits for B. napus improvement programs

    Analysis of time of flight small angle neutron scattering data on mesoscopic crystals such as magnetic vortex lattices

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    Bragg diffracted intensities and q values for crystalline structures with long repeat distances may be obtained by small angle neutron scattering SANS investigations. An account is given of the methods, advantages and disadvantages of obtaining such data by the multichromatic time of flight method, compared with the more traditional quasi monochromatic SANS method. This is illustrated with data obtained from high magnetic field measurements on magnetic vortex line lattices in superconductors on the former HFM EXED instrument at Helmholtz Zentrum Berlin. The methods have application to other mesoscopic crystalline structures investigated by SANS instruments at pulsed source

    Electronic thermal transport in strongly correlated multilayered nanostructures

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    The formalism for a linear-response many-body treatment of the electronic contributions to thermal transport is developed for multilayered nanostructures. By properly determining the local heat-current operator, it is possible to show that the Jonson-Mahan theorem for the bulk can be extended to inhomogeneous problems, so the various thermal-transport coefficient integrands are related by powers of frequency (including all effects of vertex corrections when appropriate). We illustrate how to use this formalism by showing how it applies to measurements of the Peltier effect, the Seebeck effect, and the thermal conductance.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
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