Search for dissertations about: "dominant clone"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 8 swedish dissertations containing the words dominant clone.
-
1. Genetic variation in natural populations: a modeller's perspective
Abstract : Thanks to advances in genome sequencing, empirical patterns of within- and between-species genetic variation are readily available. By studying these patterns much has been learned about the evolutionary histories of species. But the causes and consequences of different evolutionary histories are still difficult to tell apart. READ MORE
-
2. A Framework for Seamless Variant Management and Incremental Migration to a Software Product-Line
Abstract : Context: Software systems often need to exist in many variants in order to satisfy varying customer requirements and operate under varying software and hardware environments. These variant-rich systems are most commonly realized using cloning, a convenient approach to create new variants by reusing existing ones. READ MORE
-
3. Search for MODY and Type 2 diabetes genes
Abstract : Diabetes is a heterogeneous disease influenced by both environmental and genetic factors. Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) is considered as a subform of Type 2 diabetes, which is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion and expressed at childhood or early adult life. READ MORE
-
4. Regulation of gene and protein expression : two model systems
Abstract : Genetic information is expressed by DNA transcription and mRNA translation. With few exceptions, every cell of an organism, or the human body, contains the same genetic information. Yet the structure and function of different tissues are highly variable. READ MORE
-
5. The drumlin problem : streamlined subglacial bedforms in southern Sweden
Abstract : This thesis investigates stream-lined subglacial bedforms (often referred to as drumlins) in southern Sweden. The broad aim of this is to contribute to the solution of the ‘drumlin problem’. The term drumlin has come to be applied to a wide range of features whose internal architecture (core) and overall morphology are seen to vary greatly. READ MORE