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  1. It has been shown that if genetic relationships among individuals are not taken into account for genome wide association studies, this may lead to false positives. To address this problem, we used Genome-wide ...

    Authors: Burak Karacaƶren, Tomi Silander, JosƩ M Ɓlvarez-Castro, Chris S Haley and Dirk Jan de Koning
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 3):S8

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 3

  2. The assignment of DNA samples to coarse population groups can be a useful but difficult task. One such example is the inference of coarse ethnic groupings for forensic applications. Ethnicity plays an importan...

    Authors: Chih Lee, Ion I Măndoiu and Craig E Nelson
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S11

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  3. Enabled by rapid advances in sequencing technology, metagenomic studies aim to characterize entire communities of microbes bypassing the need for culturing individual bacterial members. One major goal of metag...

    Authors: Bo Liu and Mihai Pop
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S9

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  4. The binding events of DNA-interacting proteins and their patterns can be extensively characterized by high density ChIP-chip tiling array data. The characteristics of the binding events could be different for ...

    Authors: Juntao Li, Lei Zhu, Majid Eshaghi, Jianhua Liu and Krishna Murthy R Karuturi
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S8

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  5. Many genome projects were underway before the advent of high-throughput sequencing and have thus been supported by a wealth of genome information from other technologies. Such information frequently takes the ...

    Authors: Thomas N Heider, James Lindsay, Chenwei Wang, Rachel J Oā€™Neill and Andrew J Pask
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S7

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  6. A popular model for gene regulatory networks is the Boolean network model. In this paper, we propose an algorithm to perform an analysis of gene regulatory interactions using the Boolean network model and time...

    Authors: Carlos HA Higa, Vitor HP Louzada, Tales P Andrade and Ronaldo F Hashimoto
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S5

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  7. A new approach is described here to predict ubiquitinated substrates of the E3 ubiquitin ligase, TRAF6, which takes into account its interaction with the scaffold protein SQSTM1/p62. A novel TRAF6 ubiquitinati...

    Authors: Trafina S Jadhav, Marie W Wooten and Michael C Wooten
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S4

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  8. The gene networks underlying closure of the optic fissure during vertebrate eye development are not well-understood. We use a novel clustering method based on nonlinear dimension reduction with data labeling t...

    Authors: Martin Ehler, Vinodh N Rajapakse, Barry R Zeeberg, Brian P Brooks, Jacob Brown, Wojciech Czaja and Robert F Bonner
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S3

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  9. Predicting new non-coding RNAs (ncRNAs) of a family can be done by aligning the potential candidate with a member of the family with known sequence and secondary structure. Existing tools either only consider ...

    Authors: Thomas King-Fung Wong, Brenda Wing-Yan Cheung, Tak-Wah Lam and Siu-Ming Yiu
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S2

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  10. Plants have played a special role in inositol polyphosphate (IP) research since in plant seeds was discovered the first IP, the fully phosphorylated inositol ring of phytic acid (IP6). It is now known that phy...

    Authors: Fabio Fassetti, Ofelia Leone, Luigi Palopoli, Simona E Rombo and Adolfo Saiardi
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 2):S1

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 2

  11. Authors: Anne-Charlotte Sentilhes, Vimatha Xaysitthideth, Sareth Rith, Somvay Ongkhamme, Thongchanh Sisouk, Darouny Phonekeo, Jean-Jacques Bernatas, Vincent Deubel, Philippe Buchy, Paul Brey and Phengta Vongphrachanh
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 1):P74

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 1

  12. Authors: Veasna Duong, Sowath Ly, Sivuth Ong, Norith Chroeung, Patrich Lorn Try, Vincent Deubel, Sirenda Vong and Philippe Buchy
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 1):P47

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 1

  13. Authors: Jin Takasaki, Shinyu Izumi, Nguyen Dang Tuan, Dao Xuan Co, Dang Hung Minh, Ngo Quy Chau, Nguyen Gia Binh, Vu Thi Van, Toshie Manabe, Pham Thi Phuong Thuy, Tran Thuy Hanh and Koichiro Kudo
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 1):P10

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 1

  14. Authors: Polidy Pean, Eric Nerrienet, Yoann Madec, Laurence Borand, Sarin Chan, Olivier Marcy, Marcelo Fernandez, FranƧoise BarrƩ-Sinoussi, Gianfranco Pancino and Daniel Scott-Algara
    Citation: BMC Proceedings 2011 5(Suppl 1):O1

    This article is part of a Supplement: Volume 5 Supplement 1

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