15 results on '"Peter C, Thomson"'
Search Results
2. Interrogating the haemodynamic effects of haemodialysis arteriovenous fistula on cardiac structure and function
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Alastair J Rankin, Peter C. Thomson, Karen Stevenson, Paul Welsh, David B. Kingsmore, Pauline Hall Barrientos, Sokratis Stoumpos, Giles Roditi, Kenneth Mangion, Ram Kasthuri, E. Mcgregor, and Patrick B. Mark
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Male ,Cardiac output ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Heart Diseases ,Science ,Fistula ,Hemodynamics ,Arteriovenous fistula ,Cardiomegaly ,Article ,Arteriovenous Shunt, Surgical ,Renal Dialysis ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,Cardiac Output ,Prospective cohort study ,Aged ,Multidisciplinary ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Disease Management ,Blood flow ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Haemodialysis ,Cardiac hypertrophy ,Treatment Outcome ,Echocardiography ,Heart Function Tests ,Cardiology ,Kidney Failure, Chronic ,Medicine ,Female ,business ,Kidney disease - Abstract
Arteriovenous fistula (AVF) is the preferred type of vascular access for maintenance haemodialysis but it may contribute to maladaptive cardiovascular remodelling. We studied the effect of AVF creation on cardiac structure and function in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). In this prospective cohort study patients with CKD listed for first AVF creation underwent cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging at baseline and at 6 weeks. All participants had ultrasound measurements of fistula blood flow at 6 weeks. The primary outcome was the change in left ventricular (LV) mass. Secondary outcomes included changes in LV volumes, LV ejection fraction, cardiac output, LV global longitudinal strain and N-terminal-pro B-type natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP). A total of 55 participants were enrolled, of whom 40 (mean age 59 years) had AVF creation and completed both scans. On the second CMR scan, a mean increase of 7.4 g (95% CI 1.1–13.7, p = 0.02) was observed in LV mass. Significant increases in LV end-diastolic volumes (p = 0.04) and cardiac output (p = 0.02) were also seen after AVF creation. No significant changes were observed in LV end-systolic volumes, LV ejection fraction, NT-proBNP and LV global longitudinal strain. In participants with fistula blood flows ≥ 600 mL/min (n = 22) the mean increase in LV mass was 15.5 g (95% CI 7.3–23.8) compared with a small decrease of 2.5 g (95% CI − 10.6 to 5.6) in participants with blood flows
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- 2021
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3. Author Correction: Genome-wide human brain eQTLs: In-depth analysis and insights using the UKBEC dataset
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Daniah Trabzuni, Peter C. Thomson, and Letitia M. F. Sng
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Multidisciplinary ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,lcsh:R ,medicine ,lcsh:Medicine ,lcsh:Q ,Computational biology ,Human brain ,Biology ,lcsh:Science ,Genome - Abstract
An amendment to this paper has been published and can be accessed via a link at the top of the paper.
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- 2020
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4. Improving smallholder cattle reproductive efficiency in Cambodia to address expanding regional beef demand
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Peter C. Thomson, J. R. Young, Russell D. Bush, S. Suon, L. Olmo, K. Ashley, and Peter A. Windsor
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Male ,Rural Population ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Veterinary medicine ,Animal breeding ,040301 veterinary sciences ,Biosecurity ,Population ,Psychological intervention ,Cattle Diseases ,Breeding ,Biology ,0403 veterinary science ,Food Animals ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Animals ,Food Industry ,Humans ,Animal Husbandry ,Socioeconomics ,education ,education.field_of_study ,Farmers ,business.industry ,Reproduction ,Vaccination ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Animal husbandry ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Breed ,Red Meat ,Multivariate Analysis ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Livestock ,Cambodia ,business - Abstract
This study aimed to identify factors associated with cattle reproductive output in rural smallholder farms in Cambodia in order to determine the main causes of reproductive failure and design efficient interventions for improvement. The majority of the nation's beef is produced on smallholder farms where productivity is constrained by poor animal reproductivity reflected in the recent livestock population decline of approximately 13 % from 2009 to 2013. Farmers (n = 240) from 16 villages from five provinces were surveyed in mid-2015 to determine their baseline knowledge, attitude and practices (KAP) associated with cattle reproduction. In addition, 16 case studies from three of these provinces were conducted to provide a more detailed assessment of current cattle reproductive husbandry practices. In order to assess the reproductive impact of previously implemented interventions, an endpoint KAP survey and longitudinal health and husbandry study from three Cambodian provinces conducted between 2008 and 2013 were also analysed. Three multivariable prediction models (two KAP and one longitudinal) identified the following significant factors associated with the reproductive outcomes 'number of calves born' or probability that cows 'gave birth': target feeding (P = 0.074), growing vegetables (P = 0.005), attitudes towards cattle vaccination (P = 0.010), improving bull selection (P = 0.032), local breed use (P = 0.005), number of joining attempts (P
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- 2016
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5. Founder-specific inbreeding depression affects racing performance in Thoroughbred horses
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Simon Y. W. Ho, Natasha A. Hamilton, Peter C. Thomson, Rachel A. Ang, Brandon D. Velie, and Evelyn T. Todd
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Animal breeding ,Population ,lcsh:Medicine ,Athletic Performance ,Biology ,Selective breeding ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Inbreeding depression ,Animals ,Inbreeding ,Horses ,lcsh:Science ,education ,Genetic Association Studies ,education.field_of_study ,Inbreeding Depression ,Multidisciplinary ,lcsh:R ,Australia ,Founder Effect ,Breed ,Pedigree ,Genetic load ,030104 developmental biology ,Female ,lcsh:Q ,Demography ,Founder effect - Abstract
The Thoroughbred horse has played an important role in both sporting and economic aspects of society since the establishment of the breed in the 1700s. The extensive pedigree and phenotypic information available for the Thoroughbred horse population provides a unique opportunity to examine the effects of 300 years of selective breeding on genetic load. By analysing the relationship between inbreeding and racing performance of 135,572 individuals, we found that selective breeding has not efficiently alleviated the Australian Thoroughbred population of its genetic load. However, we found evidence for purging in the population that might have improved racing performance over time. Over 80% of inbreeding in the contemporary population is accounted for by a small number of ancestors from the foundation of the breed. Inbreeding to these ancestors has variable effects on fitness, demonstrating that an understanding of the distribution of genetic load is important in improving the phenotypic value of a population in the future. Our findings hold value not only for Thoroughbred and other domestic breeds, but also for small and endangered populations where such comprehensive information is not available.
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- 2018
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6. Characterization and genome-wide association mapping of resistance to leaf rust, stem rust and stripe rust in a geographically diverse collection of spring wheat landraces
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J. M. Bonman, Robert F. Park, Maria Newcomb, Ebrahiem M. Babiker, Peace Kankwatsa, Peter C. Thomson, and Davinder Singh
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Germplasm ,Puccinia ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Plant disease resistance ,Stem rust ,biology.organism_classification ,01 natural sciences ,Rust ,03 medical and health sciences ,030104 developmental biology ,Genetic marker ,Botany ,Genetics ,Plant breeding ,Gene pool ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Molecular Biology ,010606 plant biology & botany ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The challenge posed by rapidly changing wheat rust pathogens, both in virulence and in environmental adaptation, calls for the development and application of new techniques to accelerate the process of breeding for durable resistance. To expand the resistance gene pool available for germplasm improvement, a panel of 159 landraces plus old cultivars was evaluated for seedling and adult plant resistance (APR) to over 35 Australian pathotypes of Puccinia triticina, Puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici, and Puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici. Known seedling resistance (SR) genes for leaf rust (Lr2a, Lr3a, Lr13, Lr23, Lr16, and Lr20), stem rust (Sr12, Sr13, Sr23, Sr30, and Sr36), and stripe rust (Yr3, Yr4, Yr5, Yr9, Yr10, Yr17, and Yr27) were postulated. The APR genes identified via field assessments and marker analyses included the pleiotropic genes (Lr34/Yr18/Sr57, Lr46/Yr29/Sr58, Lr67/Yr46/Sr55, and Sr2/Lr27/Yr30), Lr68, Lr74, and uncharacterized APR. A genome-wide association analysis using linear mixed models detected 79 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers significantly associated with rust resistance, which were mapped on chromosomes 1A, 1B, 1D, 2A, 2B, 3A, 3B, 3D, 4A, 5A, 5B, 6A, 6B, 6D, 7A, 7B and 7D. SNPs associated with multiple rust resistances probably indicate the presence of new pleiotropic or closely linked genes. SNPs were mapped on chromosome positions (1AL, 1DS, 2AL, 4AS, 5BS, 6DL, and 7AL) that have not been known to carry APR genes. This study revealed the presence of a range of possibly unidentified effective seedling and APRs among the landraces, which might represent new sources of rust resistance for the ongoing effort to develop improved wheat cultivars.
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- 2017
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7. Biphasic survival analysis of trypanotolerance QTL in mice
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J.A.M. van Arendonk, Peter C. Thomson, H. Bovenhuis, O.D. Koudande, Fuad A. Iraqi, and John P. Gibson
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Male ,brucei ,Trypanosoma congolense ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,inbred strains ,Introgression ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Animal Breeding and Genomics ,Quantitative trait locus ,Logistic regression ,localization ,susceptibility ,resistance ,Mice ,Quantitative Trait, Heritable ,Species Specificity ,Inbred strain ,antigens ,antibody ,trypanosoma-congolense ,Genetics ,Animals ,Fokkerij en Genomica ,Allele ,Gene ,Genetics (clinical) ,Survival analysis ,biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Chromosomes, Mammalian ,Survival Analysis ,infection ,Trypanosomiasis, African ,WIAS ,Trypanosoma ,Regression Analysis ,Female ,surface coat - Abstract
A marker-assisted introgression (MAI) experiment was conducted to transfer trypanotolerance quantitative trait loci (QTL) from a donor mouse strain, C57BL/6, into a recipient mouse strain, A/J. The objective was to assess the effect of three previously identified chromosomal regions on mouse chromosomes 1 (MMU1), 5 (MMU5) and 17 (MMU17) in different genetic backgrounds on the survival pattern following infection with Trypanosoma congolense. An exploratory data analysis revealed a biphasic pattern of time to death, with highly distinct early and late mortality phases. In this paper, we present survival analysis methods that account for the biphasic mortality pattern and results of reanalyzing the data from the MAI experiment. The analysis with a Weibull mixture model confirmed the biphasic pattern of time to death. Mortality phase, an unobserved variable, appears to be an important factor influencing survival time and is modeled as a binary outcome variable using logistic regression analysis. Accounting for this biphasic pattern in the analysis reveals that a previously observed sex effect on average survival is rather an effect on proportion of mice in the two mortality phases. The C57BL/6 (donor) QTL alleles on MMU1 and MMU17 act dominantly in the late mortality phase while the A/J (recipient) QTL allele on MMU17 acts dominantly in the early mortality phase. From this study, we found clear evidence for a biphasic survival pattern and provided models for its analysis. These models can also be used when studying defense mechanisms against other pathogens. Finally, these approaches provide further information on the nature of gene actions.
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- 2008
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8. Epidemiological associations between brachycephaly and upper respiratory tract disorders in dogs attending veterinary practices in England
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Dave C. Brodbelt, Caitlin Jackson, Peter C. Thomson, Paul D. McGreevy, Jonathan Guy, David B. Church, and Dan G. O’Neill
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Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,biology.animal_breed ,Upper respiratory ,French bulldog ,Moderate brachycephalic ,Epidemiology ,Dog ,medicine ,VetCompass ,Yorkshire Terrier ,Border Terrier ,Breed type ,biology ,business.industry ,Research ,primary-care ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Breed ,West Highland White Terrier ,Neutering ,Non-brachycephalic ,Extreme brachycephalic ,business ,Brachycephaly - Abstract
Background Brachycephalic dog breeds are increasingly common. Canine brachycephaly has been associated with upper respiratory tract (URT) disorders but reliable prevalence data remain lacking. Using primary-care veterinary clinical data, this study aimed to report the prevalence and breed-type risk factors for URT disorders in dogs. Results The sampling frame included 170,812 dogs attending 96 primary-care veterinary clinics participating within the VetCompass Programme. Two hundred dogs were randomly selected from each of three extreme brachycephalic breed types (Bulldog, French Bulldog and Pug) and three common small-to medium sized breed types (moderate brachycephalic: Yorkshire Terrier and non-brachycephalic: Border Terrier and West Highland White Terrier). Information on all URT disorders recorded was extracted from individual patient records. Disorder prevalence was compared between groups using the chi-squared test or Fisher’s test, as appropriate. Risk factor analysis used multivariable logistic regression modelling. During the study, 83 (6.9 %) study dogs died. Extreme brachycephalic dogs (median longevity: 8.6 years, IQR: 2.4-10.8) were significantly younger at death than the moderate and non-brachycephalic group of dogs (median 12.7 years, IQR 11.1-15.0) (P
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- 2015
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9. Prevalence of disorders recorded in Cavalier King Charles Spaniels attending primary-care veterinary practices in England
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Paul D. McGreevy, David Brodbelt, Jennifer F. Summers, Peter C. Thomson, David B. Church, and Dan G. O’Neill
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Veterinary medicine ,biology.animal_breed ,Population ,Disease ,Primary-care practice ,Canine ,CKCS ,Epidemiology ,Oral and maxillofacial pathology ,Prevalence ,medicine ,Cavalier King Charles spaniel ,VetCompass ,education ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Research ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Breed ,Otitis ,EPR ,medicine.symptom ,Electronic patient record ,business ,Purebred - Abstract
Background Concerns have been raised over breed-related health issues in purebred dogs, but reliable prevalence estimates for disorders within specific breeds are sparse. Electronically stored patient health records from primary-care practice are emerging as a useful source of epidemiological data in companion animals. This study used large volumes of health data from UK primary-care practices participating in the VetCompass animal health surveillance project to evaluate in detail the disorders diagnosed in a random selection of over 50% of dogs recorded as Cavalier King Charles Spaniels (CKCSs). Confirmation of breed using available microchip and Kennel Club (KC) registration data was attempted. Results In total, 3624 dogs were recorded as CKCSs within the VetCompass database of which 143 (3.9%) were confirmed as KC-registered via microchip identification linkage of VetCompass to the KC database. 1875 dogs (75 KC registered and 1800 of unknown KC status, 52% of both groups) were randomly sampled for detailed clinical review. Clinical data associated with veterinary care were recorded in 1749 (93.3%) of these dogs. The most common specific disorders recorded during the study period were heart murmur (541 dogs, representing 30.9% of study group), diarrhoea of unspecified cause (193 dogs, 11.0%), dental disease (166 dogs, 9.5%), otitis externa (161, 9.2%), conjunctivitis (131, 7.4%) and anal sac infection (129, 7.4%). The five most common disorder categories were cardiac (affecting 31.7% of dogs), dermatological (22.2%), ocular (20.6%), gastrointestinal (19.3%) and dental/periodontal disorders (15.2%). Discussion and conclusions Study findings suggest that many of the disorders commonly affecting CKCSs are largely similar to those affecting the general dog population presented for primary veterinary care in the UK. However, cardiac disease (and MVD in particular) continues to be of particular concern in this breed. Further work This work highlights the value of veterinary practice based breed-specific epidemiological studies to provide targeted and evidence-based health policies. Further studies using electronic patient records in other breeds could highlight their potential disease predispositions.
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- 2015
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10. Quantitative trait loci for steady-state platelet count in mice
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Michael F. Buckley, Chris Moran, Jenny Donald, Kyall R. Zenger, Carol C. Cheung, Peter C. Thomson, and I. C. A. Martin
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Blood Platelets ,Oncogene Proteins ,Genetics ,Candidate gene ,Platelet Count ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Quantitative Trait Loci ,Mice, Inbred Strains ,Quantitative trait locus ,Biology ,Mice ,Phenotype ,Thrombopoietin ,Genetic linkage ,Gene expression ,Animals ,Humans ,Platelet ,Receptors, Cytokine ,Receptors, Thrombopoietin ,Gene ,Genotyping - Abstract
Platelet count in humans is a strongly genetically regulated trait, with approximately 85% of the interindividual variance in platelet numbers attributable to genetic factors. Inbred mouse strains also have strain-specific platelet count ranges. As part of a project to identify novel factors that regulate platelet count, we identified two inbred mouse strains, CBA/CaH and QSi5, with substantial differences in platelet count (mean values of 581 vs. 1062 x 10(9)/L). An F(2) intercross resource of 1126 animals was bred from these two parental strains for a genomewide scan for quantitative trait loci (QTL) for platelet count. QTL were identified on MMU1 (LOD 6.8, p0.0005) and MMU11 (LOD 11.2, p0.0005) by selectively genotyping animals from the extremes of the F(2) platelet count distribution. Three other QTL of suggestive statistical significance were also detected on MMU7, 13, and 17. It is noteworthy that no QTL were detected in the vicinity of the genes encoding thrombopoietin ( Thpo), and its receptor ( c-Mpl), both known to influence platelet production. Comparison of gene expression levels between the parental mouse strains by microarrays also showed little difference in the mRNA levels of these known candidate genes. These results represent the first published use of a genetic linkage-based approach in a mouse model toward the identification of genetic factors that regulate platelet count.
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- 2004
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11. Approaches to canine health surveillance
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Peter C. Thomson, Paul D. McGreevy, Dave C. Brodbelt, David B. Church, and Dan G. O’Neill
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Referral ,Epidemiology ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Review ,Primary-care practice ,computer.software_genre ,Canine ,Insurance ,Animal data ,Recall bias ,Health scheme ,Disorder ,medicine ,Information bias ,education ,media_common ,Selection bias ,education.field_of_study ,Disease surveillance ,Surveillance ,Data collection ,Referral practice ,Questionnaire ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Cancer registry ,medicine.disease ,Medical emergency ,Data mining ,business ,Data source ,computer - Abstract
Effective canine health surveillance systems can be used to monitor disease in the general population, prioritise disorders for strategic control and focus clinical research, and to evaluate the success of these measures. The key attributes for optimal data collection systems that support canine disease surveillance are representativeness of the general population, validity of disorder data and sustainability. Limitations in these areas present as selection bias, misclassification bias and discontinuation of the system respectively. Canine health data sources are reviewed to identify their strengths and weaknesses for supporting effective canine health surveillance. Insurance data benefit from large and well-defined denominator populations but are limited by selection bias relating to the clinical events claimed and animals covered. Veterinary referral clinical data offer good reliability for diagnoses but are limited by referral bias for the disorders and animals included. Primary-care practice data have the advantage of excellent representation of the general dog population and recording at the point of care by veterinary professionals but may encounter misclassification problems and technical difficulties related to management and analysis of large datasets. Questionnaire surveys offer speed and low cost but may suffer from low response rates, poor data validation, recall bias and ill-defined denominator population information. Canine health scheme data benefit from well-characterised disorder and animal data but reflect selection bias during the voluntary submissions process. Formal UK passive surveillance systems are limited by chronic under-reporting and selection bias. It is concluded that active collection systems using secondary health data provide the optimal resource for canine health surveillance.
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- 2014
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12. Empirical assessment of competitive hybridization and noise in ultra high density canine tiling arrays
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Peter C. Thomson, Mohammad R. Shariflou, Diane van Rooy, Claire M. Wade, Cali E. Willet, Laura Bunbury-Cruickshank, and Georgina Child
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Tiling path offset ,Offset (computer science) ,CNV ,Hybridization Array ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Noise (electronics) ,Reduction (complexity) ,Oligonucleotide probe ,Dogs ,aCGH ,Structural Biology ,Animals ,Probe competition ,Copy-number variation ,Molecular Biology ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Genetics ,Genome ,Tiling array ,Copy number variation ,Applied Mathematics ,Array comparative genome hybridization ,DNA ,Canis lupus ,Computer Science Applications ,DNA microarray ,Oligonucleotide Probes ,Biological system ,Oligomer restriction ,Research Article - Abstract
Background In addition to probe sequence characteristics, noise in hybridization array data is thought to be influenced by competitive hybridization between probes tiled at high densities. Empirical evaluation of competitive hybridization and an estimation of what other non-sequence related features might affect noisy data is currently lacking. Results A high density array was designed to a 1.5 megabase region of the canine genome to explore the potential for probe competition to introduce noise. Multivariate assessment of the influence of probe, segment and design characteristics on hybridization intensity demonstrate that whilst increased density significantly depresses fluorescence intensities, this effect is largely consistent when an ultra high density offset is applied. Signal variation not attributable to sequence composition resulted from the reduction in competition when large inter-probe spacing was introduced due to long repetitive elements and when a lower density offset was applied. Tiling of probes immediately adjacent to various classes of repeat elements did not generate noise. Comparison of identical probe sets hybridized with DNA extracted from blood or saliva establishes salivary DNA as a source of noise. Conclusions This analysis demonstrates the occurrence of competitive hybridization between oligonucleotide probes in high density tiling arrays. It supports that probe competition does not generate random noise when it is maintained across a region. To prevent the introduction of noise from this source, the degree of competition should be regulated by minimizing variation in density across the target region. This finding can make an important contribution to optimizing coverage whilst minimizing sources of noise in the design of high density tiling arrays.
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- 2013
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13. Prevalence and risk factors for mast cell tumours in dogs in England
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Anneliese Stell, Peter C. Thomson, David B. Church, Kate English, Dan G. O’Neill, Stephanie J. W. Shoop, Stephanie Marlow, David Brodbelt, and Paul D. McGreevy
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Veterinary medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Epidemiology ,biology.animal_breed ,Population ,Primary-care practice ,Logistic regression ,Crossbreed ,Staffordshire bull terrier ,Mast cell ,Canine ,Internal medicine ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,education ,education.field_of_study ,biology ,business.industry ,Research ,General Medicine ,Mastocytoma ,Confidence interval ,Breed ,Oncology ,Cocker spaniel ,business - Abstract
Background Mast cell tumour (MCT) appears to be a frequent tumour type in dogs, though there is little published in relation to its frequency in dogs in the UK. The current study aimed to investigate prevalence and risk factors for MCTs in dogs attending English primary-care veterinary practices. Methods Electronic patient records from practices participating in the VetCompass animal surveillance project between July 2007 and June 2013 were searched for MCT diagnosis. Various search terms and standard diagnostic terms (VeNom codes) identified records containing MCT diagnoses, which were evaluated against clinical criteria for inclusion to the study. MCT prevalence for the entire dataset and specific breed types were calculated. Descriptive statistics characterised MCT cases and multivariable logistic regression methods evaluated risk factors for association with MCT (P
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- 2015
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14. Composite selection signals can localize the trait specific genomic regions in multi-breed populations of cattle and sheep
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Herman W. Raadsma, Mehar S. Khatkar, I. A. S. Randhawa, and Peter C. Thomson
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Candidate gene ,Genotype ,Sequence analysis ,Locus (genetics) ,Breeding ,Biology ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Double muscle ,Polledness ,Genetics ,Animals ,Genetics(clinical) ,Selection, Genetic ,Gene ,Sheep, Domestic ,Genetics (clinical) ,Selection (genetic algorithm) ,Selection signatures ,Sheep ,Autosome ,Methodology Article ,Haplotype ,Chromosome Mapping ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Phenotype ,Genetic Loci ,Evolutionary biology ,Geographic origin ,Cattle ,Adaptation ,Selective sweeps - Abstract
Background Discerning the traits evolving under neutral conditions from those traits evolving rapidly because of various selection pressures is a great challenge. We propose a new method, composite selection signals (CSS), which unifies the multiple pieces of selection evidence from the rank distribution of its diverse constituent tests. The extreme CSS scores capture highly differentiated loci and underlying common variants hauling excess haplotype homozygosity in the samples of a target population. Results The data on high-density genotypes were analyzed for evidence of an association with either polledness or double muscling in various cohorts of cattle and sheep. In cattle, extreme CSS scores were found in the candidate regions on autosome BTA-1 and BTA-2, flanking the POLL locus and MSTN gene, for polledness and double muscling, respectively. In sheep, the regions with extreme scores were localized on autosome OAR-2 harbouring the MSTN gene for double muscling and on OAR-10 harbouring the RXFP2 gene for polledness. In comparison to the constituent tests, there was a partial agreement between the signals at the four candidate loci; however, they consistently identified additional genomic regions harbouring no known genes. Persuasively, our list of all the additional significant CSS regions contains genes that have been successfully implicated to secondary phenotypic diversity among several subpopulations in our data. For example, the method identified a strong selection signature for stature in cattle capturing selective sweeps harbouring UQCC-GDF5 and PLAG1-CHCHD7 gene regions on BTA-13 and BTA-14, respectively. Both gene pairs have been previously associated with height in humans, while PLAG1-CHCHD7 has also been reported for stature in cattle. In the additional analysis, CSS identified significant regions harbouring multiple genes for various traits under selection in European cattle including polledness, adaptation, metabolism, growth rate, stature, immunity, reproduction traits and some other candidate genes for dairy and beef production. Conclusions CSS successfully localized the candidate regions in validation datasets as well as identified previously known and novel regions for various traits experiencing selection pressure. Together, the results demonstrate the utility of CSS by its improved power, reduced false positives and high-resolution of selection signals as compared to individual constituent tests.
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- 2014
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15. The mammary gland-specific marsupial ELP and eutherian CTI share a common ancestral gene
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Peter C. Thomson, Marilyn B. Renfree, Christophe Lefevre, Elizabeth A. Pharo, Kevin R. Nicholas, and Alison A De Leo
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Evolution ,Pseudogene ,Trypsin inhibitor ,Dunnart ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Evolution, Molecular ,Dogs ,Mammary Glands, Animal ,Pregnancy ,QH359-425 ,Animals ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Cloning, Molecular ,Gene ,Zebra finch ,Phylogeny ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis ,Cloning ,Genetics ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,biology ,Computational Biology ,Genomics ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Milk Proteins ,biology.organism_classification ,Marsupialia ,biology.protein ,Cattle ,Female ,Whey Acidic Protein ,Kunitz domain ,Sequence Alignment ,Research Article - Abstract
Background The marsupial early lactation protein (ELP) gene is expressed in the mammary gland and the protein is secreted into milk during early lactation (Phase 2A). Mature ELP shares approximately 55.4% similarity with the colostrum-specific bovine colostrum trypsin inhibitor (CTI) protein. Although ELP and CTI both have a single bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI)-Kunitz domain and are secreted only during the early lactation phases, their evolutionary history is yet to be investigated. Results Tammar ELP was isolated from a genomic library and the fat-tailed dunnart and Southern koala ELP genes cloned from genomic DNA. The tammar ELP gene was expressed only in the mammary gland during late pregnancy (Phase 1) and early lactation (Phase 2A). The opossum and fat-tailed dunnart ELP and cow CTI transcripts were cloned from RNA isolated from the mammary gland and dog CTI from cells in colostrum. The putative mature ELP and CTI peptides shared 44.6%-62.2% similarity. In silico analyses identified the ELP and CTI genes in the other species examined and provided compelling evidence that they evolved from a common ancestral gene. In addition, whilst the eutherian CTI gene was conserved in the Laurasiatherian orders Carnivora and Cetartiodactyla, it had become a pseudogene in others. These data suggest that bovine CTI may be the ancestral gene of the Artiodactyla-specific, rapidly evolving chromosome 13 pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (PTI), spleen trypsin inhibitor (STI) and the five placenta-specific trophoblast Kunitz domain protein (TKDP1-5) genes. Conclusions Marsupial ELP and eutherian CTI evolved from an ancestral therian mammal gene before the divergence of marsupials and eutherians between 130 and 160 million years ago. The retention of the ELP gene in marsupials suggests that this early lactation-specific milk protein may have an important role in the immunologically naïve young of these species.
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- 2012
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