A QTL for Number of Teats Shows Breed Specific Effects on Number of Vertebrae in Pigs: Bridging the Gap Between Molecular and Quantitative Genetics
Published 2019 View Full Article
- Home
- Publications
- Publication Search
- Publication Details
Title
A QTL for Number of Teats Shows Breed Specific Effects on Number of Vertebrae in Pigs: Bridging the Gap Between Molecular and Quantitative Genetics
Authors
Keywords
-
Journal
Frontiers in Genetics
Volume 10, Issue -, Pages -
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Online
2019-03-28
DOI
10.3389/fgene.2019.00272
References
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Related references
Note: Only part of the references are listed.- Whole-genome association and genome partitioning revealed variants and explained heritability for total number of teats in a Yorkshire pig population
- (2018) Md. Rasel Uzzaman et al. ASIAN-AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCES
- VRTN is Required for the Development of Thoracic Vertebrae in Mammals
- (2018) Yanyu Duan et al. International Journal of Biological Sciences
- Determination of quantitative trait nucleotides by concordance analysis between quantitative trait loci and marker genotypes of US Holsteins
- (2018) J.I. Weller et al. JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
- Teat number parameters in Italian Large White pigs: Phenotypic analysis and association with vertnin (VRTN ) gene allele variants
- (2018) Stefania Dall'Olio et al. Livestock Science
- Folic acid and vitamin B 12 fortification of food for preventing neural tube defects in Europe
- (2018) Michael Turner BMJ-British Medical Journal
- Folic acid and vitamin B 12 fortification of food for preventing neural tube defects in Europe
- (2018) Michael Turner BMJ-British Medical Journal
- Using markers with large effect in genetic and genomic predictions1
- (2017) M. S. Lopes et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
- Rapid Communication: High-resolution quantitative trait loci analysis identifies LTBP2 encoding latent transforming growth factor beta binding protein 2 associated with thoracic vertebrae number in a large F2 intercross between Landrace and Korean native pigs1
- (2017) H.-B. Park et al. JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCE
- Clinical or ATPase domain mutations in ABCD4 disrupt the interaction between the vitamin B12-trafficking proteins ABCD4 and LMBD1
- (2017) Victoria Fettelschoss et al. JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
- Ensembl 2018
- (2017) Daniel R Zerbino et al. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
- Genotype Imputation with Millions of Reference Samples
- (2016) Brian L. Browning et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
- Identification of loci affecting teat number by genome-wide association studies on three pig populations
- (2016) Jianhong Tang et al. ASIAN-AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF ANIMAL SCIENCES
- Automatic segmentation of Computed Tomography (CT) images of domestic pig skeleton using a 3D expansion of Dijkstra’s algorithm
- (2016) Lars Erik Gangsei et al. COMPUTERS AND ELECTRONICS IN AGRICULTURE
- Genome-wide study refines the quantitative trait locus for number of ribs in a Large White × Minzhu intercross pig population and reveals a new candidate gene
- (2016) Long-Chao Zhang et al. MOLECULAR GENETICS AND GENOMICS
- Possible introgression of the VRTN mutation increasing vertebral number, carcass length and teat number from Chinese pigs into European pigs
- (2016) Jie Yang et al. Scientific Reports
- Genome-wide association QTL mapping for teat number in a purebred population of Duroc pigs
- (2015) A. Arakawa et al. ANIMAL GENETICS
- A study of vertebra number in pigs confirms the association of vertnin and reveals additional QTL
- (2015) Gary A. Rohrer et al. BMC GENETICS
- SpeedSeq: ultra-fast personal genome analysis and interpretation
- (2015) Colby Chiang et al. NATURE METHODS
- A new approach for efficient genotype imputation using information from relatives
- (2014) Mehdi Sargolzaei et al. BMC GENOMICS
- High-resolution association mapping of number of teats in pigs reveals regions controlling vertebral development
- (2014) Naomi Duijvesteijn et al. BMC GENOMICS
- Advantages and pitfalls in the application of mixed-model association methods
- (2014) Jian Yang et al. NATURE GENETICS
- A Genome-Wide Association Study Reveals Dominance Effects on Number of Teats in Pigs
- (2014) Marcos S. Lopes et al. PLoS One
- Transcriptional profiling of the human fibrillin/LTBP gene family, key regulators of mesenchymal cell functions
- (2013) Margaret R. Davis et al. MOLECULAR GENETICS AND METABOLISM
- A Further Look at Porcine Chromosome 7 Reveals VRTN Variants Associated with Vertebral Number in Chinese and Western Pigs
- (2013) Yin Fan et al. PLoS One
- Role of a polymorphism in a Hox/Pax-responsive enhancer in the evolution of the vertebrate spine
- (2013) I. Guerreiro et al. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
- Mapping and fine mapping of quantitative trait loci for the number of vertebrae in a White Duroc × Chinese Erhualian intercross resource population
- (2012) D. R. Ren et al. ANIMAL GENETICS
- Integrative Genomics Viewer (IGV): high-performance genomics data visualization and exploration
- (2012) H. Thorvaldsdottir et al. BRIEFINGS IN BIOINFORMATICS
- Mutations in ABCD4 cause a new inborn error of vitamin B12 metabolism
- (2012) David Coelho et al. NATURE GENETICS
- Accelerating the Tempo of the Segmentation Clock by Reducing the Number of Introns in the Hes7 Gene
- (2012) Yukiko Harima et al. Cell Reports
- The variant call format and VCFtools
- (2011) P. Danecek et al. BIOINFORMATICS
- Identification of a second gene associated with variation in vertebral number in domestic pigs
- (2011) Satoshi Mikawa et al. BMC GENETICS
- Integrative genomics viewer
- (2011) James T Robinson et al. NATURE BIOTECHNOLOGY
- GCTA: A Tool for Genome-wide Complex Trait Analysis
- (2010) Jian Yang et al. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
- The Sequence Alignment/Map format and SAMtools
- (2009) H. Li et al. BIOINFORMATICS
Become a Peeref-certified reviewer
The Peeref Institute provides free reviewer training that teaches the core competencies of the academic peer review process.
Get StartedAsk a Question. Answer a Question.
Quickly pose questions to the entire community. Debate answers and get clarity on the most important issues facing researchers.
Get Started