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1.
Anim Genet ; 52(1): 126-131, 2021 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33107621

ABSTRACT

Russian sheep breeds represent an important economic asset by providing meat and wool, whilst being adapted to extreme climates. By resequencing two Russian breeds from Siberia: Tuva (n = 20) and Baikal (n = 20); and comparing them with a European (UK) sheep outgroup (n = 14), 41 million variants were called, and signatures of selection were identified. High-frequency missense mutations on top of selection peaks were found in genes related to immunity (LOC101109746) in the Baikal breed and wool traits (IDUA), cell differentiation (GLIS1) and fat deposition (AADACL3) in the Tuva breed. In addition, genes found under selection owing to haplotype frequency changes were related to wool traits (DSC2), parasite resistance (CLCA1), insulin receptor pathway (SOCS6) and DNA repair (DDB2) in the Baikal breed, and vision (GPR179) in the Tuva breed. Our results present candidate genes and SNPs for future selection programmes, which are necessary to maintain and increase socioeconomic gain from Siberian breeds.


Subject(s)
Adaptation, Physiological/genetics , Sheep/genetics , Animals , Breeding , Mutation, Missense , Phenotype , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Siberia
2.
Phys Rev E ; 99(2-1): 022602, 2019 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30934362

ABSTRACT

Active swarms, consisting of individual agents which consume energy to move or produce work, are known to generate a diverse range of collective behaviors. Many examples of active swarms are biological in nature (e.g., fish shoals and bird flocks) and have been modeled extensively by numerical simulations. Such simulations of swarms usually assume that the swarm is homogeneous; that is, every agent has exactly the same dynamical properties. However, many biological swarms are highly heterogeneous, such as multispecies communities of micro-organisms in soil, and individual species may have a wide range of different physical properties. Here we explore heterogeneity by developing a simple model for the dynamics of a swarm of motile heterogeneous rodlike bacteria in the absence of hydrodynamic effects. Using molecular dynamics simulations of active rods confined within a two-dimensional rectangular channel, we first explore the case of homogeneous swarms and show that the key parameter governing both dynamics is ratio of the motility force to the steric force. Next we explore heterogeneous or mixed swarms in which the constituent self-propelled rods have a range of motilities and steric interactions. Our results show that the confining boundaries play a strong role in driving the segregation of mixed populations.

3.
Comput Chem ; 26(1): 85-95, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11765856

ABSTRACT

Side-chain placement is an important sub-task in protein modelling. Selecting conformations for side-chains is a difficult problem because of the large search space to be explored. This problem can be addressed using constraint logic programming (CLP), which is an artificial intelligence technique developed to solve large combinatorial search problems. The side-chain placement problem can be expressed as a CLP program in which rotamer conformations are used as values for finite domain variables, and bad steric contacts involving rotamers are represented as constraints. This paper introduces the concept of null rotamers, and shows how these can be used in implementing a novel iterative approach. We present results that compare the accuracy of models constructed using different rotamer libraries and different domain variable enumeration heuristics. The results obtained using this CLP-based approach compare favourably with those obtained by other methods.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Protein Conformation , Software , Algorithms , Crystallography, X-Ray , Models, Molecular
4.
Adolescence ; 12(48): 559-69, 1977.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-596268

ABSTRACT

Contrary to the theory of the homeostatic model of self-concept, i.e., the expectancy that engaging in anti-social or pro-social behavior results typically in shifts in the self-concept (Graf, 1968; Deitz, 1970 shifts did not occur. Subjects, 12- 14-year-old boys enrolled in junior high school, delinquent prone (DP) and non-delinquent prone bright (NDPB), reacted to manipulation by engaging in reparative behavior as indicated via an aggression module in a fashion generally expected but the expected shift from chronic self-images did not occur. Both DP and NDPB viewed themselves similarly on self concept. The authors postulated that if shifts would occur for the delinquent prone it would be after they left school with its accompanying identification with a sub-culture outside the school setting.


Subject(s)
Juvenile Delinquency , Self Concept , Adolescent , Age Factors , Aggression , Child , Helping Behavior , Humans , Intelligence , Male , Personality Development , Set, Psychology
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