Scholl, Elizabeth H, Thorne, Jeffrey L, McCarter, James P, Bird, David Mck
Abstract Background Published accounts of horizontally acquired genes in plant-parasitic nematodes have not been the result of a specific search for gene transfer per se , but rather have emerged...
Horizontally transferred genes in plant-parasitic nematodes: a high-throughput genomic approach
Scholl, Elizabeth H, Thorne, Jeffrey L, McCarter, James P, Bird, David Mck
A method for a high-throughput genome screening for horizontally acquired genes is presented, and is illustrated using EST data from three species of root-knot nematode, Meloidogyne species.
Seo, Tae-Kun, Kishino, Hirohisa, Thorne, Jeffrey L.
Because of the increase of genomic data, multiple genes are often available for the inference of phylogenetic relationships. The simple approach for combining multiple genes from the same taxon is to...
Estimation of effective population size of HIV-1 within a host: a pseudomaximum-likelihood approach.
Seo, Tae-Kun, Thorne, Jeffrey L, Hasegawa, Masami, Kishino, Hirohisa
Using pseudomaximum-likelihood approaches to phylogenetic inference and coalescent theory, we develop a computationally tractable method of estimating effective population size from serially sampled...
Horizontally transferred genes in plant-parasitic nematodes: a high-throughput genomic approach
Scholl, Elizabeth H, Thorne, Jeffrey L, McCarter, James P, Bird, David Mck
A method for a high-throughput genome screening for horizontally acquired genes is presented, and is illustrated using EST data from three species of root-knot nematode, Meloidogyne species.
Seo, Tae-Kun, Kishino, Hirohisa, Thorne, Jeffrey L.
Because of the increase of genomic data, multiple genes are often available for the inference of phylogenetic relationships. The simple approach for combining multiple genes from the same taxon is to...
Estimation of effective population size of HIV-1 within a host: a pseudomaximum-likelihood approach.
Seo, Tae-Kun, Thorne, Jeffrey L, Hasegawa, Masami, Kishino, Hirohisa
Using pseudomaximum-likelihood approaches to phylogenetic inference and coalescent theory, we develop a computationally tractable method of estimating effective population size from serially sampled...