4,369 results on '"A. Kirilenko"'
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2. Molecular-Beam Epitaxy of Metamorphic InAs/InGaAs Quantum-Dot Heterostructures Emitting in the Telecom Wavelength Range
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Sorokin, S. V., Klimko, G. V., Sedova, I. V., Galimov, A. I., Serov, Yu. M., Kirilenko, D. A., Prasolov, N. D., and Toropov, A. A.
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- 2024
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3. Climate-Driven Dynamics of Grain Production in Russia in XX–XXI Centuries: A Review of Statistical Models in Historical Studies
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Dronin, Nikolai and Kirilenko, Andrey
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- 2024
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4. Formation of Thin GaAs Buffer Layers on Silicon for Light-Emitting Devices
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Lendyashova, Vera, Ilkiv, Igor, Borodin, Bogdan, Kirilenko, Demid, Dragunova, Anna, Shugabaev, Talgat, and Cirlin, George
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Physics - Applied Physics ,Physics - Optics - Abstract
This paper presents the experimental results on research of growth processes of GaAs layers on silicon substrates by molecular beam epitaxy. The formation of buffer Si layer in a single growth process has been found to significantly improve the crystalline quality of the GaAs layers formed on its surface, as well as to prevent the formation of anti-phase domains both on offcutted towards the [110] direction and on singular Si(100) substrates. It has been demonstrated that the use of cyclic thermal annealing at temperatures 350-660{\deg}C in the flow of arsenic atoms makes it possible to reduce the number of threading dislocations and increase the smoothness of the GaAs layers surface. At the same time, the article considers possible mechanisms that lead to an improvement in the quality of the surface layers of GaAs. It is shown that the thus obtained GaAs layers of submicron thickness on the singular Si(100) substrates have a mean square value of surface roughness 1.9 nm. The principal possibility of using thin GaAs layers on silicon as templates for forming on them light-emitting semiconductor heterostructures with active area based on self-organizing InAs quantum dots and InGaAs quantum well is presented. They are shown to exhibit photoluminescence at 1.2 um at room temperature., Comment: 18 pages, in Russian language, 6 figures
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- 2024
5. Vocal learning-associated convergent evolution in mammalian proteins and regulatory elements.
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Wirthlin, Morgan, Schmid, Tobias, Elie, Julie, Zhang, Xiaomeng, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Redlich, Ruby, Shvareva, Varvara, Rakuljic, Ashley, Ji, Maria, Bhat, Ninad, Kaplow, Irene, Schäffer, Daniel, Lawler, Alyssa, Wang, Andrew, Phan, BaDoi, Annaldasula, Siddharth, Brown, Ashley, Lu, Tianyu, Lim, Byung, Azim, Eiman, Clark, Nathan, Meyer, Wynn, Pond, Sergei, Chikina, Maria, Yartsev, Michael, Pfenning, Andreas, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce, Bredemeyer, Kevin, Breit, Ana, Christmas, Matthew, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Genereux, Diane, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela, Harris, Andrew, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson, Hubley, Robert, Hughes, Graham, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Karlsson, Elinor, Keough, Kathleen, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer, Kozyrev, Sergey, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle, Lewin, Harris, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor, Meadows, Jennifer, Moore, Jill, Moreira, Lucas, Moreno-Santillan, Diana, Morrill, Kathleen, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole, Pollard, Katherine, Pratt, Henry, Ray, David, Reilly, Steven, Rosen, Jeb, and Ruf, Irina
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Animals ,Chiroptera ,Vocalization ,Animal ,Motor Cortex ,Chromatin ,Enhancer Elements ,Genetic ,Motor Neurons ,Larynx ,Epigenesis ,Genetic ,Genome ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Proteins ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Eutheria ,Machine Learning - Abstract
Vocal production learning (vocal learning) is a convergently evolved trait in vertebrates. To identify brain genomic elements associated with mammalian vocal learning, we integrated genomic, anatomical, and neurophysiological data from the Egyptian fruit bat (Rousettus aegyptiacus) with analyses of the genomes of 215 placental mammals. First, we identified a set of proteins evolving more slowly in vocal learners. Then, we discovered a vocal motor cortical region in the Egyptian fruit bat, an emergent vocal learner, and leveraged that knowledge to identify active cis-regulatory elements in the motor cortex of vocal learners. Machine learning methods applied to motor cortex open chromatin revealed 50 enhancers robustly associated with vocal learning whose activity tended to be lower in vocal learners. Our research implicates convergent losses of motor cortex regulatory elements in mammalian vocal learning evolution.
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- 2024
6. Environment modulates protein heterogeneity through transcriptional and translational stop codon readthrough
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Romero Romero, Maria Luisa, Poehls, Jonas, Kirilenko, Anastasiia, Richter, Doris, Jumel, Tobias, Shevchenko, Anna, and Toth-Petroczy, Agnes
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- 2024
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7. Evaluating flood potential with GRACE in the United States
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T. Molodtsova, S. Molodtsov, A. Kirilenko, X. Zhang, and J. VanLooy
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Environmental technology. Sanitary engineering ,TD1-1066 ,Geography. Anthropology. Recreation ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Reager and Famiglietti (2009) proposed an index, Reager's Flood Potential Index (RFPI), for early large-scale flood risk monitoring using the Terrestrial Water Storage Anomaly (TWSA) product derived from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE). We evaluated the efficacy of the RFPI for flood risk assessment over the continental USA using multi-year flood observation data from 2003 to 2012 by the US Geological Survey and Dartmouth Flood Observatory. In general, we found a good agreement between the RFPI flood risks and the observed floods on regional and even local scales. RFPI demonstrated skill in predicting the large-area, long-duration floods, especially during the summer season.
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- 2016
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8. Object-Centric Learning with Slot Mixture Module
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Kirilenko, Daniil, Vorobyov, Vitaliy, Kovalev, Alexey K., and Panov, Aleksandr I.
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Computer Science - Machine Learning ,Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
Object-centric architectures usually apply a differentiable module to the entire feature map to decompose it into sets of entity representations called slots. Some of these methods structurally resemble clustering algorithms, where the cluster's center in latent space serves as a slot representation. Slot Attention is an example of such a method, acting as a learnable analog of the soft k-means algorithm. Our work employs a learnable clustering method based on the Gaussian Mixture Model. Unlike other approaches, we represent slots not only as centers of clusters but also incorporate information about the distance between clusters and assigned vectors, leading to more expressive slot representations. Our experiments demonstrate that using this approach instead of Slot Attention improves performance in object-centric scenarios, achieving state-of-the-art results in the set property prediction task., Comment: Published as a conference paper at ICLR 2024
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- 2023
9. Allotropic Ga$_2$Se$_3$/GaSe nanostructures grown by van der Waals epitaxy: Narrow exciton lines and single-photon emission
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Rakhlin, Maxim, Sorokin, Sergey, Galimov, Aidar, Eliseyev, Ilya, Davydov, Valery, Kirilenko, Demid, Toropov, Alexey, and Shubina, Tatiana
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Condensed Matter - Mesoscale and Nanoscale Physics - Abstract
The ability to emit narrow exciton lines, preferably with a clearly defined polarization, is one of the key conditions for the use of nanostructures based on III-VI monochalcogenides and other layered crystals in quantum technology to create non-classical light. Currently, the main method of their formation is exfoliation followed by strain and defect engineering. A factor limiting the use of epitaxy is the presence of different phases in the grown films. In this work, we show that control over their formation makes it possible to create structures with the desired properties. We propose Ga$_2$Se$_3$/GaSe nanostructures by van der Waals epitaxy with a high VI/III flux ratio as a source of narrow exciton lines. Actually, these nanostructures are a combination of allotropes: GaSe and Ga$_2$Se$_3$, consisting of the same atoms in different arrangements. The energy position of the narrow lines is determined by the quantum confinement in Ga$_2$Se$_3$ inclusions of different sizes in the GaSe matrix, similar to quantum dots, and their linear polarization is due to the ordering of Ga vacancies in a certain crystalline direction in Ga$_2$Se$_3$. Such nanostructures exhibit single-photon emission with second-order correlation function $g^{(2)}(0)\sim$0.1 at 10 K that makes them promising for quantum technologies.
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- 2023
10. Magnetic Properties of (Mg1 –xCox)3Si2O5(OH)4 Nanoscrolls and Nanocomposites Based on Them
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Belskaya, N. A., Khrapova, E. K., Ivanova, A. A., Eremina, R. M., Batulin, R. G., Chikurov, D. S., Degtyarenko, P. N., Tsvetkov, A. Yu., Kirilenko, D. A., and Krasilin, A. A.
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- 2024
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11. Formation of Thin GaAs Buffer Layers on Silicon for Light-Emitting Devices
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Lendyashova, V. V., Ilkiv, I. V., Borodin, B. R., Kirilenko, D. A., Dragunova, A. S., Shugabaev, T., and Cirlin, G. E.
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- 2024
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12. Voltammetric Determination of Caffeine in Energy Drinks Using an Electrode Modified with a Nafion Film and Mixed-Valence Iridium Oxides
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Shaidarova, L. G., Chelnokova, I. A., Koryakovtseva, D. A., Kirilenko, D. A., and Budnikov, H. C.
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- 2024
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13. GenArk: towards a million UCSC genome browsers.
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Lee, Brian, Raney, Brian, Barber, Galt, Casper, Jonathan, Diekhans, Mark, Fischer, Clay, Gonzalez, Jairo, Hinrichs, Angie, Lee, Christopher, Nassar, Luis, Perez, Gerardo, Wick, Brittney, Schmelter, Daniel, Speir, Matthew, Armstrong, Joel, Zweig, Ann, Kuhn, Robert, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Hiller, Michael, Haussler, David, Kent, W, Haeussler, Maximilian, and Clawson, Hiram
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Software ,Genome ,Genomics ,Archives ,Nucleic Acid Amplification Techniques ,Databases ,Genetic ,Internet - Abstract
Interactive graphical genome browsers are essential tools in genomics, but they do not contain all the recent genome assemblies. We create Genome Archive (GenArk) collection of UCSC Genome Browsers from NCBI assemblies. Built on our established track hub system, this enables fast visualization of annotations. Assemblies come with gene models, repeat masks, BLAT, and in silico PCR. Users can add annotations via track hubs and custom tracks. We can bulk-import third-party resources, demonstrated with TOGA and Ensembl gene models for hundreds of assemblies.Three thousand two hundred sixty-nine GenArk assemblies are listed at https://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/hubs/ and can be searched for on the Genome Browser gateway page.
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- 2023
14. Integrating gene annotation with orthology inference at scale
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Kirilenko, Bogdan M, Munegowda, Chetan, Osipova, Ekaterina, Jebb, David, Sharma, Virag, Blumer, Moritz, Morales, Ariadna E, Ahmed, Alexis-Walid, Kontopoulos, Dimitrios-Georgios, Hilgers, Leon, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Karlsson, Elinor K, Hiller, Michael, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Genereux, Diane P, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Ryder, Oliver A, Sabeti, Pardis C, Schäffer, Daniel E, Serres, Aitor, Shapiro, Beth, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, Srinivasan, Chaitanya, Steiner, Cynthia, Storer, Jessica M, Sullivan, Kevin AM, and Sullivan, Patrick F
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Biotechnology ,Human Genome ,Generic health relevance ,Animals ,Female ,Mice ,Eutheria ,Genome ,Genomics ,Molecular Sequence Annotation ,Birds ,Zoonomia Consortium‡ ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Annotating coding genes and inferring orthologs are two classical challenges in genomics and evolutionary biology that have traditionally been approached separately, limiting scalability. We present TOGA (Tool to infer Orthologs from Genome Alignments), a method that integrates structural gene annotation and orthology inference. TOGA implements a different paradigm to infer orthologous loci, improves ortholog detection and annotation of conserved genes compared with state-of-the-art methods, and handles even highly fragmented assemblies. TOGA scales to hundreds of genomes, which we demonstrate by applying it to 488 placental mammal and 501 bird assemblies, creating the largest comparative gene resources so far. Additionally, TOGA detects gene losses, enables selection screens, and automatically provides a superior measure of mammalian genome quality. TOGA is a powerful and scalable method to annotate and compare genes in the genomic era.
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- 2023
15. TransPath: Learning Heuristics For Grid-Based Pathfinding via Transformers
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Kirilenko, Daniil, Andreychuk, Anton, Panov, Aleksandr, and Yakovlev, Konstantin
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Computer Science - Artificial Intelligence ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
Heuristic search algorithms, e.g. A*, are the commonly used tools for pathfinding on grids, i.e. graphs of regular structure that are widely employed to represent environments in robotics, video games etc. Instance-independent heuristics for grid graphs, e.g. Manhattan distance, do not take the obstacles into account and, thus, the search led by such heuristics performs poorly in the obstacle-rich environments. To this end, we suggest learning the instance-dependent heuristic proxies that are supposed to notably increase the efficiency of the search. The first heuristic proxy we suggest to learn is the correction factor, i.e. the ratio between the instance independent cost-to-go estimate and the perfect one (computed offline at the training phase). Unlike learning the absolute values of the cost-to-go heuristic function, which was known before, when learning the correction factor the knowledge of the instance-independent heuristic is utilized. The second heuristic proxy is the path probability, which indicates how likely the grid cell is lying on the shortest path. This heuristic can be utilized in the Focal Search framework as the secondary heuristic, allowing us to preserve the guarantees on the bounded sub-optimality of the solution. We learn both suggested heuristics in a supervised fashion with the state-of-the-art neural networks containing attention blocks (transformers). We conduct a thorough empirical evaluation on a comprehensive dataset of planning tasks, showing that the suggested techniques i) reduce the computational effort of the A* up to a factor of $4$x while producing the solutions, which costs exceed the costs of the optimal solutions by less than $0.3$% on average; ii) outperform the competitors, which include the conventional techniques from the heuristic search, i.e. weighted A*, as well as the state-of-the-art learnable planners., Comment: Pre-print of the paper accepted to AAAI'23
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- 2022
16. Study of SiO2 Films Implanted with 64Zn+ Ions and Oxidized at Elevated Temperatures
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Privezentsev, V. V., Sergeev, A. P., Firsov, A. A., Kulikauskas, V. S., Zatekin, V. V., Kirilenko, E. P., Goryachev, A. V., and Kovalskiy, V. A.
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- 2024
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17. Gluten-free beer with unmalted millet
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Dymchenko, Alan, Kirilenko, Yulia, Ochkolyas, Olena, and Bal-Prylypko, Larysa
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- 2024
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18. Instagram travel influencers coping with COVID-19 travel disruption
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Kirilenko, Andrei, Emin, Katarzyna, and Tavares, Karen C. N.
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- 2024
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19. Method for automatic detection of movement-related EEG pattern time boundaries
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Shcherban, I. V., Lazurenko, D. M., Shcherban, O. G., Shaposhnikov, D. G., Kirilenko, N. E., and Shustova, A. V.
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- 2024
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20. Assessment of the stability of common winter wheat breeding lines in multi-environment tests
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Oleksandr Demydov, Nina Zamlila, Nataliia Novytska, Vira Kirilenko, and Bohdan Miliar
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winter wheat ,breeding line ,genotype-environment interaction ,statistical parameters ,Agriculture - Abstract
Climate change poses a challenge to agricultural production. To avoid production losses and exploit the emerging potential, adaptation in agricultural management will inevitably be required, in particular through the development of highly adapted and plastic varieties. To obtain wheat varieties combining productivity and stability, in 2018-2021, eight promising breeding lines of common winter wheat were studied in multi-environment eighteen trials at the V.M. Remeslo Myronivka Institute of Wheat of the National Academy of Agrarian Sciences of Ukraine using three sowing dates after two preceding crops. Using ANOVA, it was established that environmental conditions had the highest reliable contribution to the yield variation (72.09%), genotype-environment interaction and genotype had significantly less (25.30% and 2.61%, respectively). The sowing dates for the preceding crops had a significant effect on the variation in the line productivity. Higher yields were received after green manure (mustard) in 2019 and 2020. The stable maximum level of productivity in terms of sowing dates was after preceding crop mustard as green manure for sowing on October 5 (the third term) and after maize for silage for sowing on September 25 (the second term). It was found that the conditions of the second sowing date were as an analytical background for selection of high-yielding lines of winter wheat. For practical breeding work, the breeding lines Lutescens 36921, Erythrospermum 36866, Erythrospermum 36802 were selected and released as new varieties Trudovnytsia Myronivska, MIP Vyshyvanka, and Gracia Myronivska, which have high yields and adaptability
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- 2024
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21. A genomic timescale for placental mammal evolution
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Foley, Nicole M, Mason, Victor C, Harris, Andrew J, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Damas, Joana, Lewin, Harris A, Eizirik, Eduardo, Gatesy, John, Karlsson, Elinor K, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Springer, Mark S, Murphy, William J, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gazal, Steven, Genereux, Diane P, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Ryder, Oliver A, Sabeti, Pardis C, Schäffer, Daniel E, Serres, Aitor, Shapiro, Beth, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, Srinivasan, Chaitanya, Steiner, Cynthia, Storer, Jessica M, Sullivan, Kevin AM, Sullivan, Patrick F, and Sundström, Elisabeth
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Genetics ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,Animals ,Female ,Biological Evolution ,Eutheria ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Fossils ,Genomics ,Phylogeny ,Genetic Variation ,Time Factors ,Zoonomia Consortium‡ ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
The precise pattern and timing of speciation events that gave rise to all living placental mammals remain controversial. We provide a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of genetic variation across an alignment of 241 placental mammal genome assemblies, addressing prior concerns regarding limited genomic sampling across species. We compared neutral genome-wide phylogenomic signals using concatenation and coalescent-based approaches, interrogated phylogenetic variation across chromosomes, and analyzed extensive catalogs of structural variants. Interordinal relationships exhibit relatively low rates of phylogenomic conflict across diverse datasets and analytical methods. Conversely, X-chromosome versus autosome conflicts characterize multiple independent clades that radiated during the Cenozoic. Genomic time trees reveal an accumulation of cladogenic events before and immediately after the Cretaceous-Paleogene (K-Pg) boundary, implying important roles for Cretaceous continental vicariance and the K-Pg extinction in the placental radiation.
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- 2023
22. Comparative genomics of Balto, a famous historic dog, captures lost diversity of 1920s sled dogs
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Moon, Katherine L, Huson, Heather J, Morrill, Kathleen, Wang, Ming-Shan, Li, Xue, Srikanth, Krishnamoorthy, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Svenson, Gavin J, Karlsson, Elinor K, Shapiro, Beth, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Genereux, Diane P, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Ryder, Oliver A, Sabeti, Pardis C, Schäffer, Daniel E, Serres, Aitor, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, Srinivasan, Chaitanya, Steiner, Cynthia, Storer, Jessica M, Sullivan, Kevin AM, Sullivan, Patrick F, Sundström, Elisabeth, Supple, Megan A, and Swofford, Ross
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Agricultural ,Veterinary and Food Sciences ,Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Animals ,Dogs ,Male ,Genome ,Genomics ,Genotype ,Phenotype ,Wolves ,Biodiversity ,Genetic Variation ,Zoonomia Consortium ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
We reconstruct the phenotype of Balto, the heroic sled dog renowned for transporting diphtheria antitoxin to Nome, Alaska, in 1925, using evolutionary constraint estimates from the Zoonomia alignment of 240 mammals and 682 genomes from dogs and wolves of the 21st century. Balto shares just part of his diverse ancestry with the eponymous Siberian husky breed. Balto's genotype predicts a combination of coat features atypical for modern sled dog breeds, and a slightly smaller stature. He had enhanced starch digestion compared with Greenland sled dogs and a compendium of derived homozygous coding variants at constrained positions in genes connected to bone and skin development. We propose that Balto's population of origin, which was less inbred and genetically healthier than that of modern breeds, was adapted to the extreme environment of 1920s Alaska.
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- 2023
23. The contribution of historical processes to contemporary extinction risk in placental mammals
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Wilder, Aryn P, Supple, Megan A, Subramanian, Ayshwarya, Mudide, Anish, Swofford, Ross, Serres-Armero, Aitor, Steiner, Cynthia, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Genereux, Diane P, Karlsson, Elinor K, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Munoz Fuentes, Violeta, Foley, Kathleen, Meyer, Wynn K, Ryder, Oliver A, Shapiro, Beth, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Sabeti, Pardis C, Schäffer, Daniel E, Serres, Aitor, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, and Srinivasan, Chaitanya
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Biological Sciences ,Evolutionary Biology ,Genetics ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Human Genome ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Life on Land ,Animals ,Female ,Pregnancy ,Eutheria ,Extinction ,Biological ,Genetic Variation ,Genome ,Population Density ,Risk ,Zoonomia Consortium‡ ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Species persistence can be influenced by the amount, type, and distribution of diversity across the genome, suggesting a potential relationship between historical demography and resilience. In this study, we surveyed genetic variation across single genomes of 240 mammals that compose the Zoonomia alignment to evaluate how historical effective population size (Ne) affects heterozygosity and deleterious genetic load and how these factors may contribute to extinction risk. We find that species with smaller historical Ne carry a proportionally larger burden of deleterious alleles owing to long-term accumulation and fixation of genetic load and have a higher risk of extinction. This suggests that historical demography can inform contemporary resilience. Models that included genomic data were predictive of species' conservation status, suggesting that, in the absence of adequate census or ecological data, genomic information may provide an initial risk assessment.
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- 2023
24. The functional and evolutionary impacts of human-specific deletions in conserved elements
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Xue, James R, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Mouri, Kousuke, Garcia, Meilin Fernandez, Dong, Michael X, Akers, Jared F, Noble, Mark, Li, Xue, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Karlsson, Elinor K, Noonan, James P, Capellini, Terence D, Brennand, Kristen J, Tewhey, Ryan, Sabeti, Pardis C, Reilly, Steven K, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Genereux, Diane P, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Lind, Abigail, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Ryder, Oliver A, Schäffer, Daniel E, Serres, Aitor, Shapiro, Beth, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, Srinivasan, Chaitanya, and Steiner, Cynthia
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Biotechnology ,Neurosciences ,Human Genome ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Underpinning research ,Generic health relevance ,Neurological ,Humans ,Conserved Sequence ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Genome ,Genomics ,RNA-Binding Proteins ,Sequence Deletion ,Brain ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Developmental ,Zoonomia Consortium† ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Conserved genomic sequences disrupted in humans may underlie uniquely human phenotypic traits. We identified and characterized 10,032 human-specific conserved deletions (hCONDELs). These short (average 2.56 base pairs) deletions are enriched for human brain functions across genetic, epigenomic, and transcriptomic datasets. Using massively parallel reporter assays in six cell types, we discovered 800 hCONDELs conferring significant differences in regulatory activity, half of which enhance rather than disrupt regulatory function. We highlight several hCONDELs with putative human-specific effects on brain development, including HDAC5, CPEB4, and PPP2CA. Reverting an hCONDEL to the ancestral sequence alters the expression of LOXL2 and developmental genes involved in myelination and synaptic function. Our data provide a rich resource to investigate the evolutionary mechanisms driving new traits in humans and other species.
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- 2023
25. Relating enhancer genetic variation across mammals to complex phenotypes using machine learning
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Kaplow, Irene M, Lawler, Alyssa J, Schäffer, Daniel E, Srinivasan, Chaitanya, Sestili, Heather H, Wirthlin, Morgan E, Phan, BaDoi N, Prasad, Kavya, Brown, Ashley R, Zhang, Xiaomeng, Foley, Kathleen, Genereux, Diane P, Karlsson, Elinor K, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Meyer, Wynn K, Pfenning, Andreas R, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Ryder, Oliver A, Sabeti, Pardis C, Serres, Aitor, Shapiro, Beth, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, and Steiner, Cynthia
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Biological Sciences ,Genetics ,Pediatric ,Human Genome ,Rare Diseases ,Congenital Structural Anomalies ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Neurological ,Mental health ,Animals ,Enhancer Elements ,Genetic ,Genetic Variation ,Machine Learning ,Mammals ,Phenotype ,Zoonomia Consortium** ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Protein-coding differences between species often fail to explain phenotypic diversity, suggesting the involvement of genomic elements that regulate gene expression such as enhancers. Identifying associations between enhancers and phenotypes is challenging because enhancer activity can be tissue-dependent and functionally conserved despite low sequence conservation. We developed the Tissue-Aware Conservation Inference Toolkit (TACIT) to associate candidate enhancers with species' phenotypes using predictions from machine learning models trained on specific tissues. Applying TACIT to associate motor cortex and parvalbumin-positive interneuron enhancers with neurological phenotypes revealed dozens of enhancer-phenotype associations, including brain size-associated enhancers that interact with genes implicated in microcephaly or macrocephaly. TACIT provides a foundation for identifying enhancers associated with the evolution of any convergently evolved phenotype in any large group of species with aligned genomes.
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- 2023
26. Three-dimensional genome rewiring in loci with human accelerated regions
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Keough, Kathleen C, Whalen, Sean, Inoue, Fumitaka, Przytycki, Pawel F, Fair, Tyler, Deng, Chengyu, Steyert, Marilyn, Ryu, Hane, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Karlsson, Elinor, Nowakowski, Tomasz, Ahituv, Nadav, Pollen, Alex, Pollard, Katherine S, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Genereux, Diane P, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Karlsson, Elinor K, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, Ryan, Louise, Ryder, Oliver A, Sabeti, Pardis C, Schäffer, Daniel E, Serres, Aitor, Shapiro, Beth, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark, Srinivasan, Chaitanya, Steiner, Cynthia, Storer, Jessica M, and Sullivan, Kevin AM
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Stem Cell Research ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,Underpinning research ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Animals ,Humans ,Chromatin ,Genome ,Human ,Genomics ,Pan troglodytes ,Genetic Loci ,Neurogenesis ,Deep Learning ,Zoonomia Consortium§ ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Human accelerated regions (HARs) are conserved genomic loci that evolved at an accelerated rate in the human lineage and may underlie human-specific traits. We generated HARs and chimpanzee accelerated regions with an automated pipeline and an alignment of 241 mammalian genomes. Combining deep learning with chromatin capture experiments in human and chimpanzee neural progenitor cells, we discovered a significant enrichment of HARs in topologically associating domains containing human-specific genomic variants that change three-dimensional (3D) genome organization. Differential gene expression between humans and chimpanzees at these loci suggests rewiring of regulatory interactions between HARs and neurodevelopmental genes. Thus, comparative genomics together with models of 3D genome folding revealed enhancer hijacking as an explanation for the rapid evolution of HARs.
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- 2023
27. Evolutionary constraint and innovation across hundreds of placental mammals
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Christmas, Matthew J, Kaplow, Irene M, Genereux, Diane P, Dong, Michael X, Hughes, Graham M, Li, Xue, Sullivan, Patrick F, Hindle, Allyson G, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Breit, Ana M, Diekhans, Mark, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Goodman, Daniel B, Goodman, Linda, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Lawless, Colleen, Lind, Abigail L, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Moreira, Lucas R, Redlich, Ruby W, Ryan, Louise, Swofford, Ross, Valenzuela, Alejandro, Wagner, Franziska, Wallerman, Ola, Brown, Ashley R, Damas, Joana, Fan, Kaili, Gatesy, John, Grimshaw, Jenna, Johnson, Jeremy, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Marinescu, Voichita D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Osmanski, Austin, Paulat, Nicole S, Phan, BaDoi N, Reilly, Steven K, Schäffer, Daniel E, Steiner, Cynthia, Supple, Megan A, Wilder, Aryn P, Wirthlin, Morgan E, Xue, James R, Birren, Bruce W, Gazal, Steven, Hubley, Robert M, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Meyer, Wynn K, Nweeia, Martin, Sabeti, Pardis C, Shapiro, Beth, Smit, Arian FA, Springer, Mark S, Teeling, Emma C, Weng, Zhiping, Hiller, Michael, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Paten, Benedict, Pollard, Katherine S, Ray, David A, Ruf, Irina, Ryder, Oliver A, Pfenning, Andreas R, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Karlsson, Elinor K, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Clawson, Hiram, Di Palma, Federica, Eizirik, Eduardo, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, and Halsey, Michaela K
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,Biotechnology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Generic health relevance ,Animals ,Female ,Humans ,Conserved Sequence ,Eutheria ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Genome ,Human ,Zoonomia Consortium§ ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Zoonomia is the largest comparative genomics resource for mammals produced to date. By aligning genomes for 240 species, we identify bases that, when mutated, are likely to affect fitness and alter disease risk. At least 332 million bases (~10.7%) in the human genome are unusually conserved across species (evolutionarily constrained) relative to neutrally evolving repeats, and 4552 ultraconserved elements are nearly perfectly conserved. Of 101 million significantly constrained single bases, 80% are outside protein-coding exons and half have no functional annotations in the Encyclopedia of DNA Elements (ENCODE) resource. Changes in genes and regulatory elements are associated with exceptional mammalian traits, such as hibernation, that could inform therapeutic development. Earth's vast and imperiled biodiversity offers distinctive power for identifying genetic variants that affect genome function and organismal phenotypes.
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- 2023
28. Leveraging base-pair mammalian constraint to understand genetic variation and human disease
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Sullivan, Patrick F, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Gazal, Steven, Phan, BaDoi N, Li, Xue, Genereux, Diane P, Dong, Michael X, Bianchi, Matteo, Andrews, Gregory, Sakthikumar, Sharadha, Nordin, Jessika, Roy, Ananya, Christmas, Matthew J, Marinescu, Voichita D, Wang, Chao, Wallerman, Ola, Xue, James, Yao, Shuyang, Sun, Quan, Szatkiewicz, Jin, Wen, Jia, Huckins, Laura M, Lawler, Alyssa, Keough, Kathleen C, Zheng, Zhili, Zeng, Jian, Wray, Naomi R, Li, Yun, Johnson, Jessica, Chen, Jiawen, Paten, Benedict, Reilly, Steven K, Hughes, Graham M, Weng, Zhiping, Pollard, Katherine S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Karlsson, Elinor K, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Armstrong, Joel C, Birren, Bruce W, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Clawson, Hiram, Damas, Joana, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Johnson, Jeremy, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Lewin, Harris A, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, and Navarro, Arcadi
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Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Genetics ,Biotechnology ,Clinical Research ,Human Genome ,Brain Disorders ,Generic health relevance ,Animals ,Humans ,Biological Evolution ,Genetic Variation ,Genome ,Human ,Genome-Wide Association Study ,Genomics ,Molecular Sequence Annotation ,Polymorphism ,Single Nucleotide ,Disease ,Zoonomia Consortium§ ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Thousands of genomic regions have been associated with heritable human diseases, but attempts to elucidate biological mechanisms are impeded by an inability to discern which genomic positions are functionally important. Evolutionary constraint is a powerful predictor of function, agnostic to cell type or disease mechanism. Single-base phyloP scores from 240 mammals identified 3.3% of the human genome as significantly constrained and likely functional. We compared phyloP scores to genome annotation, association studies, copy-number variation, clinical genetics findings, and cancer data. Constrained positions are enriched for variants that explain common disease heritability more than other functional annotations. Our results improve variant annotation but also highlight that the regulatory landscape of the human genome still needs to be further explored and linked to disease.
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- 2023
29. Determining the Polyphenol Complex in Reynoutria japonica Houtt. by the Tandem Mass Spectrometry Method
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Razgonova, M. P., Cherevach, E. I., Kirilenko, N. S., Demidova, E. N., and Golokhvast, K. S.
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- 2024
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30. Generative Models for Counterfactual Explanations.
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Daniil E. Kirilenko, Pietro Barbiero, Martin Gjoreski, Mitja Lustrek, and Marc Langheinrich
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- 2024
31. Authentication of SMIs by Culturally Different Audiences: Investigation with Chat GPT-3 Prompt Engineering
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Stepchenkova, Svetlana, Kirilenko, Andrei, Yang, Jing, Berezina, Katerina, editor, Nixon, Lyndon, editor, and Tuomi, Aarni, editor
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- 2024
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32. Automated Topic Analysis with Large Language Models
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Kirilenko, Andrei, Stepchenkova, Svetlana, Berezina, Katerina, editor, Nixon, Lyndon, editor, and Tuomi, Aarni, editor
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- 2024
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33. Facilitating topic modeling in tourism research:Comprehensive comparison of new AI technologies
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Kirilenko, Andrei P. and Stepchenkova, Svetlana
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- 2025
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34. Selective area epitaxy of gallium phosphide-based nanostructures on microsphere lithography-patterned Si wafers for visible light optoelectronics
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Dvoretckaia, Liliia N., Fedorov, Vladimir V., Pavlov, Alexander, Komarov, Sergey D., Moiseev, Eduard I., Miniv, Dmitry V., Kaveev, Andrey K., Smirnov, Aliaksandr G., Kirilenko, Demid A., Mozharov, Alexey M., and Mukhin, Ivan S.
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- 2025
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35. Bottom-up designing nanostructured oxide libraries under a lab-on-chip paradigm towards a low-cost highly-selective E-nose
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Solomatin, Maksim A., Fedorov, Fedor S., Kirilenko, Demid A., Trouillet, Vanessa, Varezhnikov, Alexey S., Kiselev, Ilia V., Geckle, Udo, Sommer, Martin, Bainyashev, Alexey M., Artemov, Vasily, Ushakov, Nikolay M., Goffman, Vladimir G., Rabchinskii, Maxim K., Nasibulin, Albert G., and Sysoev, Victor V.
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- 2025
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36. Superior strength-ductility synergy in ultrafine-grained Al–5Mg alloy
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Mavlyutov, Aydar M., Kirilenko, Demid A., Levin, Aleksandr A., Murashkin, Maxim Yu., Sadykov, Dinislam I., and Orlova, Tatiana S.
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- 2025
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37. Generative models for grid-based and image-based pathfinding
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Kirilenko, Daniil, Andreychuk, Anton, Panov, Aleksandr I., and Yakovlev, Konstantin
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- 2025
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38. Capturing differences between culturally dissimilar audiences in the authentication of SMIs who organically promote destinations: The large language model approach
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Stepchenkova, Svetlana, Kirilenko, Andrei, and Yang, Jing
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- 2025
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39. Influence of ultrafine-grained structure parameters on the annealing-induced hardening and deformation-induced softening effects in pure Al
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Dinislam I. Sadykov, Andrey E. Medvedev, Maxim Yu. Murashkin, Nariman A. Enikeev, Demid A. Kirilenko, and Tatiana S. Orlova
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Ultrafine-grained Al ,Severe plastic deformation ,Mechanical properties ,Annealing-induced hardening ,Deformation-induced softening ,Technology - Abstract
This work investigates the influence of parameters of initial ultrafine-grained (UFG) structure in commercially pure (CP) Al on annealing-induced hardening (AIH) and deformation-induced softening (DIS) effects. UFG structures were formed via processing CP Al by various methods of severe plastic deformation (high pressure torsion (HPT), equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) and combination of ECAP and cold rolling (CR)). AIH and DIS effects are observed in all the studied UFG structures. However, HPT Al demonstrates large increase of strength due to annealing and drastic gain of ductility after subsequent additional deformation whereas in ECAP Al and ECAP + CR Al both effects are much less pronounced. Microstructure characterization by X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis, electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was performed for HPT Al and ECAP + CR Al in the three studied states: before and after annealing and after annealing and subsequent additional deformation. Analysis of microstructure evolution during annealing and subsequent additional deformation shows that the key microstructure parameter which is responsible for AIH and DIS effect is the change of dislocation density in grain interior in ECAP + CR Al, whereas in HPT Al the effects are related to the change of dislocation density at/near grain boundaries. In addition, outstanding combination of high strength (∼210 MPa), high electrical conductivity (∼62 %IACS) with sufficiently good ductility (7–10 %) and thermal stability (up to 150°С, at least) was achieved for ECAP + CR Al after annealing at 150 °C, 1h.
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- 2024
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40. EIGEN-OSCILLATIONS OF PLANAR-CHIRAL BILAYER OBJECTS GIVE RISE TO ARTIFICIAL OPTICAL ACTIVITY
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A. O. Kirilenko, S. O. Steshenko, Y. M. Ostryzhnyi, and V. M. Derkach
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eigen-oscillations ,bilayer objects ,3d-chirality ,artificial optical activity ,dihedral symmetry ,planar-chiral irises ,polarization converters ,Astronomy ,QB1-991 - Abstract
Subject and Purpose. The research focuses on how the resonance frequencies, the Q-factor of resonances, and the polarization plane rotation ability are influenced by the topology of individual components of a planar-chiral double-layer object consisting of a pair of conjugated irises having rectangular slots and accommodated in a circular waveguide. Methods and Methodology. All the numerical results are obtained by the mode-matching technique (MMT) and the transverse resonance method on the basis of our own proprietary MWD-03 software package. Results. By the waveguide example, it has been shown that the internal structure of individual components and dihedral symmetry of the conjugated bilayer allow all the conclusions of the spectral theory (theory of eigen-oscillations) to be carried over to all the objects of the type. On the other hand, these objects behave as symmetric two-port waveguide components with conventionally "symmetric" and "antisymmetric" eigen-oscillations. The mutual coupling of these eigen-oscillations depends on the bilayer parameters. Where the frequencies of these eigen-oscillations are close enough, the polarization plane rotation and the transmission bandwidth reach their highest. It has been demonstrated that as a slot number increases, the resonance frequency decreases. The theoretical results have been confirmed by the measurements at the X range of frequencies for pairs of conjugated irises with various numbers of rectangular slots. Conclusions. A pair of conjugated chiral irises can rotate the polarization plane. The iris topology, iris spacing, and the mutual rotation angle alter resonance frequencies. The resonance frequencies can be reduced by increasing the rectangular slot length and/or slot number. Even though they have not longitudinal symmetry, such objects have properties of two-port waveguide components. In particular, the phase shift of their reflection and transmission coefficients is modulo 90°. Besides, a possibility exists to divide eigen-oscillations into conventionally "symmetric" and "antisymmetric" based on the proximity of their fields to those whose type of symmetry is known before- hand. This makes it possible to approximate the reflection and transmission coefficients through corresponding eigenfrequencies.
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- 2024
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41. Plasma Enhanced Atomic Layer Deposition of InP Layers and Multilayer InP/GaP Structures on Si Substrate
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Gudovskikh, A. S., Uvarov, A. V., Baranov, A. I., Vyacheslavova, E. A., Maksimova, A. A., and Kirilenko, D. A.
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- 2024
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42. Analysis of Climatic (according to Observations in 1993–2023) and Microbioclimatic Health-improving Potential of Kislovodsk
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Koryagina, Yu. V., Donets, E. V., Efimenko, N. V., Ter-Akopov, G. N., Tychinina, A. P., Nopin, S. V., Popov, A. N., and Kirilenko, A. A.
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- 2024
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43. Influence of the Sign of the Zeta Potential of Nanodiamond Particles on the Morphology of Graphene-detonation Nanodiamond Composites in the form of Suspensions and Aerogels
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Rabchinskii, M. K., Trofimuk, A. D., Shvidchenko, A. V., Baidakova, M. V., Pavlov, S. I., Kirilenko, D. A., Kulvelis, Yu. V., Gudkov, M. V., Shiyanova, K. A., Koval, V. S., Peters, G. S., Lebedev, V. T., Melnikov, V. P., Dideikin, A. T., and Brunkov, P. N.
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- 2023
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44. Structure and Optical Properties of a Composite AsSb–Al0.6Ga0.4As0.97Sb0.03 Metamaterial
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Snigirev, L. A., Ushanov, V. I., Ivanov, A. A., Bert, N. A., Kirilenko, D. A., Yagovkina, M. A., Preobrazhenskii, V. V., Putyato, M. A., Semyagin, B. P., Kasatkin, I. A., and Chaldyshev, V. V.
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- 2023
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45. The Effect of AlN Buffer Layer Morphology on the Structural Quality of a Semipolar GaN Layer Grown on a Si(001) Substrate, According to Transmission Electron Microscopy Data
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Kirilenko, D. A., Myasoedov, A. V., Kalmykov, A. E., and Sorokin, L. M.
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- 2023
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46. Formation of Defects Forming Deep Levels in SiON/AlGaN/GaN Structures
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Enisherlova, K. L., Mikhaylov, I. A., Seidman, L. A., Kirilenko, E. P., and Kolkovsky, Yu. V.
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- 2023
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47. TEM investigation of the interface formation during transfer of 3C-SiC(001) layer onto 6H-SiC(0001) wafer.
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Myasoedov, A. V., Mynbaeva, M. G., Lebedev, S. P., Priobrazhenskii, S. Iu., Amelchuk, D. G., Kirilenko, D. A., and Lebedev, A. A.
- Subjects
CHEMICAL vapor deposition ,SUBSTRATES (Materials science) ,TRANSMISSION electron microscopy ,DIFFRACTION patterns ,ELECTRON diffraction - Abstract
At present, intensive research is underway in the field of vacuum-sublimation growth of 3C-SiC. Transfer of a thin (001)3C-SiC layer onto a 6H-SiC wafer is a promising way to fabricate a 3C-SiC/6H-SiC substrate for growing device-quality homoepitaxial films of low defect density. The article presents the results of the structural characterization of an interface formed during the transfer of a 3C-SiC layer onto a 6H-SiC(0001) wafer, performed with transmission electron microscopy (TEM). A 3C-SiC film with a thickness of about 10 μ m, grown by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) on a Si(001) substrate, was utilized in the study. Silicon acted as a bonding material in the transfer process. The morphology and microstructure of the interface between a 6H-SiC substrate and a 3C-SiC (001)-oriented layer are under consideration. TEM investigation reveals an effect of "self"-orientation of the layer with respect to the wafer during the transfer process: an interaction between the molten silicon layer and silicon carbide throughout crystallization results in the generation of defined orientation relationships with respect to substrate axes. An analysis of selected area electron diffraction patterns taken from interfaces showed the relationships to be 3C-SiC{001} ‖ 6H-SiC(0001) and 3C-SiC ⟨ 1 1 ¯ 0 ⟩ ∼ ‖ 6H-SiC ⟨ 11 2 ¯ 0 ⟩. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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48. A haplotype-resolved genome assembly of the Nile rat facilitates exploration of the genetic basis of diabetes.
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Toh, Huishi, Yang, Chentao, Formenti, Giulio, Raja, Kalpana, Yan, Lily, Tracey, Alan, Chow, William, Howe, Kerstin, Bergeron, Lucie, Zhang, Guojie, Haase, Bettina, Mountcastle, Jacquelyn, Fedrigo, Olivier, Fogg, John, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Munegowda, Chetan, Hiller, Michael, Jain, Aashish, Kihara, Daisuke, Rhie, Arang, Phillippy, Adam, Swanson, Scott, Jiang, Peng, Jarvis, Erich, Thomson, James, Stewart, Ron, Chaisson, Mark, Bukhman, Yury, and Clegg, Dennis
- Subjects
Arvicanthis niloticus ,Diabetes ,Diurnal ,Genome ,Germline mutation rate ,Heterozygosity ,Long-read genome assembly ,Orthology ,Positive selection ,Retrogenes ,Segmental duplications ,Humans ,Animals ,Haplotypes ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Type 2 ,Murinae ,Genome ,Genomics - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Nile rat (Avicanthis niloticus) is an important animal model because of its robust diurnal rhythm, a cone-rich retina, and a propensity to develop diet-induced diabetes without chemical or genetic modifications. A closer similarity to humans in these aspects, compared to the widely used Mus musculus and Rattus norvegicus models, holds the promise of better translation of research findings to the clinic. RESULTS: We report a 2.5 Gb, chromosome-level reference genome assembly with fully resolved parental haplotypes, generated with the Vertebrate Genomes Project (VGP). The assembly is highly contiguous, with contig N50 of 11.1 Mb, scaffold N50 of 83 Mb, and 95.2% of the sequence assigned to chromosomes. We used a novel workflow to identify 3613 segmental duplications and quantify duplicated genes. Comparative analyses revealed unique genomic features of the Nile rat, including some that affect genes associated with type 2 diabetes and metabolic dysfunctions. We discuss 14 genes that are heterozygous in the Nile rat or highly diverged from the house mouse. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings reflect the exceptional level of genomic resolution present in this assembly, which will greatly expand the potential of the Nile rat as a model organism.
- Published
- 2022
49. Evolution of the ancestral mammalian karyotype and syntenic regions
- Author
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Damas, Joana, Corbo, Marco, Kim, Jaebum, Turner-Maier, Jason, Farré, Marta, Larkin, Denis M, Ryder, Oliver A, Steiner, Cynthia, Houck, Marlys L, Hall, Shaune, Shiue, Lily, Thomas, Stephen, Swale, Thomas, Daly, Mark, Korlach, Jonas, Uliano-Silva, Marcela, Mazzoni, Camila J, Birren, Bruce W, Genereux, Diane P, Johnson, Jeremy, Lindblad-Toh, Kerstin, Karlsson, Elinor K, Nweeia, Martin T, Johnson, Rebecca N, Lewin, Harris A, Andrews, Gregory, Armstrong, Joel C, Bianchi, Matteo, Bredemeyer, Kevin R, Breit, Ana M, Christmas, Matthew J, Clawson, Hiram, Di Palma, Federica, Diekhans, Mark, Dong, Michael X, Eizirik, Eduardo, Fan, Kaili, Fanter, Cornelia, Foley, Nicole M, Forsberg-Nilsson, Karin, Garcia, Carlos J, Gatesy, John, Gazal, Steven, Goodman, Linda, Grimshaw, Jenna, Halsey, Michaela K, Harris, Andrew J, Hickey, Glenn, Hiller, Michael, Hindle, Allyson G, Hubley, Robert M, Hughes, Graham M, Juan, David, Kaplow, Irene M, Keough, Kathleen C, Kirilenko, Bogdan, Koepfli, Klaus-Peter, Korstian, Jennifer M, Kowalczyk, Amanda, Kozyrev, Sergey V, Lawler, Alyssa J, Lawless, Colleen, Lehmann, Thomas, Levesque, Danielle L, Li, Xue, Lind, Abigail, Mackay-Smith, Ava, Marinescu, Voichita D, Marques-Bonet, Tomas, Mason, Victor C, Meadows, Jennifer RS, Meyer, Wynn K, Moore, Jill E, Moreira, Lucas R, Moreno-Santillan, Diana D, Morrill, Kathleen M, Muntané, Gerard, Murphy, William J, Navarro, Arcadi, Nweeia, Martin, Ortmann, Sylvia, Osmanski, Austin, Paten, Benedict, Paulat, Nicole S, Pfenning, Andreas R, Phan, BaDoi N, Pollard, Katherine S, Pratt, Henry E, Ray, David A, Reilly, Steven K, Rosen, Jeb R, Ruf, Irina, and Ryan, Louise
- Subjects
Biological Sciences ,Bioinformatics and Computational Biology ,Evolutionary Biology ,Genetics ,Human Genome ,1.1 Normal biological development and functioning ,Generic health relevance ,Animals ,Cattle ,Chromosomes ,Mammalian ,Eutheria ,Evolution ,Molecular ,Humans ,Karyotype ,Mammals ,Phylogeny ,Sloths ,Synteny ,chromosome evolution ,mammals ,synteny conservation ,ancestral genome reconstruction ,topologically associating domains ,Zoonomia Consortium - Abstract
Decrypting the rearrangements that drive mammalian chromosome evolution is critical to understanding the molecular bases of speciation, adaptation, and disease susceptibility. Using 8 scaffolded and 26 chromosome-scale genome assemblies representing 23/26 mammal orders, we computationally reconstructed ancestral karyotypes and syntenic relationships at 16 nodes along the mammalian phylogeny. Three different reference genomes (human, sloth, and cattle) representing phylogenetically distinct mammalian superorders were used to assess reference bias in the reconstructed ancestral karyotypes and to expand the number of clades with reconstructed genomes. The mammalian ancestor likely had 19 pairs of autosomes, with nine of the smallest chromosomes shared with the common ancestor of all amniotes (three still conserved in extant mammals), demonstrating a striking conservation of synteny for ∼320 My of vertebrate evolution. The numbers and types of chromosome rearrangements were classified for transitions between the ancestral mammalian karyotype, descendent ancestors, and extant species. For example, 94 inversions, 16 fissions, and 14 fusions that occurred over 53 My differentiated the therian from the descendent eutherian ancestor. The highest breakpoint rate was observed between the mammalian and therian ancestors (3.9 breakpoints/My). Reconstructed mammalian ancestor chromosomes were found to have distinct evolutionary histories reflected in their rates and types of rearrangements. The distributions of genes, repetitive elements, topologically associating domains, and actively transcribed regions in multispecies homologous synteny blocks and evolutionary breakpoint regions indicate that purifying selection acted over millions of years of vertebrate evolution to maintain syntenic relationships of developmentally important genes and regulatory landscapes of gene-dense chromosomes.
- Published
- 2022
50. Influence of phase state, conducting sublayer material and deposition method on mechanical properties and adhesion of Ge2Sb2Te5 thin films
- Author
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Yakubov, Alexey, Lazarenko, Petr, Kirilenko, Elena, Sagunova, Irina, Babich, Alexey, and Sherchenkov, Alexey
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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