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Dive into the research topics where Cecilia Bobillo is active.

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Featured researches published by Cecilia Bobillo.


Annals of Human Genetics | 2010

Inferring Continental Ancestry of Argentineans from Autosomal, Y‐Chromosomal and Mitochondrial DNA

Daniel Corach; Oscar Lao; Cecilia Bobillo; Kristiaan J. van der Gaag; Sofia Zuniga; Mark Vermeulen; Kate van Duijn; Miriam Goedbloed; Peter M. Vallone; Walther Parson; Peter de Knijff; Manfred Kayser

We investigated the bio‐geographic ancestry of Argentineans, and quantified their genetic admixture, analyzing 246 unrelated male individuals from eight provinces of three Argentinean regions using ancestry‐sensitive DNA markers (ASDM) from autosomal, Y and mitochondrial chromosomes. Our results demonstrate that European, Native American and African ancestry components were detectable in the contemporary Argentineans, the amounts depending on the genetic system applied, exhibiting large inter‐individual heterogeneity. Argentineans carried a large fraction of European genetic heritage in their Y‐chromosomal (94.1%) and autosomal (78.5%) DNA, but their mitochondrial gene pool is mostly of Native American ancestry (53.7%); instead, African heritage was small in all three genetic systems (<4%). Population substructure in Argentina considering the eight sampled provinces was very small based on autosomal (0.92% of total variation was between provincial groups, p = 0.005) and mtDNA (1.77%, p = 0.005) data (none with NRY data), and all three genetic systems revealed no substructure when clustering the provinces into the three geographic regions to which they belong. The complex genetic ancestry picture detected in Argentineans underscores the need to apply ASDM from all three genetic systems to infer geographic origins and genetic admixture. This applies to all worldwide areas where people with different continental ancestry live geographically close together.


International Journal of Legal Medicine | 2009

A GEP-ISFG collaborative study on the optimization of an X-STR decaplex: data on 15 Iberian and Latin American populations

Leonor Gusmão; Paula Sánchez-Diz; Cíntia Alves; Iva Gomes; María T. Zarrabeitia; Mariel Abovich; Ivannia Atmetlla; Cecilia Bobillo; Luisa Bravo; J.J. Builes; Laura M. Cainé; Raquel Calvo; E.F. Carvalho; M. Carvalho; Regina Maria Barretto Cicarelli; Laura Catelli; Daniel Corach; Marta Espinoza; O. Garcia; Marcelo Malaghini; Joyce da Silva Martins; Fátima Pinheiro; Maria João Porto; Eduardo Raimondi; José A. Riancho; Amelia Rodríguez; Anayanci Rodríguez; Belén Rodríguez Cardozo; Vicente Schneider; Sandra Silva

In a collaborative work carried out by the Spanish and Portuguese ISFG Working Group (GEP-ISFG), a polymerase chain reaction multiplex was optimized in order to type ten X-chromosome short tandem repeats (STRs) in a single reaction, including: DXS8378, DXS9902, DXS7132, DXS9898, DXS6809, DXS6789, DXS7133, GATA172D05, GATA31E08, and DXS7423. Using this X-decaplex, each 17 of the participating laboratories typed a population sample of approximately 200 unrelated individuals (100 males and 100 females). In this work, we report the allele frequencies for the ten X-STRs in 15 samples from Argentina (Buenos Aires, Córdoba, Río Negro, Entre Ríos, and Misiones), Brazil (São Paulo, Rio de Janeiro, Paraná, and Mato Grosso do Sul), Colombia (Antioquia), Costa Rica, Portugal (Northern and Central regions), and Spain (Galicia and Cantabria). Gene diversities were calculated for the ten markers in each population and all values were above 56%. The average diversity per locus varied between 66%, for DXS7133, and 82%, for DXS6809. For this set of STRs, a high discrimination power was obtained in all populations, both in males (≥1 in 5 × 105) and females (≥1 in 3 × 109), as well as high mean exclusion chance in father/daughter duos (≥99.953%) and in father/mother/daughter trios (≥99.999%). Genetic distance analysis showed no significant differences between northern and central Portugal or between the two Spanish samples from Galicia and Cantabria. Inside Brazil, significant differences were found between Rio de Janeiro and the other three populations, as well as between São Paulo and Paraná. For the five Argentinean samples, significant distances were only observed when comparing Misiones with Entre Ríos and with Río Negro, the only two samples that do not differ significantly from Costa Rica. Antioquia differed from all other samples, except the one from Río Negro.


Environmental Pollution | 2009

Phytoremediation potential of the novel atrazine tolerant Lolium multiflorum and studies on the mechanisms involved.

Luciano J. Merini; Cecilia Bobillo; Virginia Cuadrado; Daniel Corach; Ana M. Giulietti

Atrazine impact on human health and the environment have been extensively studied. Phytoremediation emerged as a low cost, environmental friendly biotechnological solution for atrazine pollution in soil and water. In vitro atrazine tolerance assays were performed and Lolium multiflorum was found as a novel tolerant species, able to germinate and grow in the presence of 1 mg kg(-1) of the herbicide. L. multiflorum presented 20% higher atrazine removal capacity than the natural attenuation, with high initial degradation rate in microcosms. The mechanisms involved in atrazine tolerance such as mutation in psbA gene, enzymatic detoxification via P(450) or chemical hydrolysis through benzoxazinones were evaluated. It was demonstrated that atrazine tolerance is conferred by enhanced enzymatic detoxification via P(450). Due to its atrazine degradation capacity in soil and its agronomical properties, L. multiflorum is a candidate for designing phytoremediation strategies for atrazine contaminated agricultural soils, especially those involving run-off avoiding.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2011

Rapid screening for Native American mitochondrial and Y-chromosome haplogroups detection in routine DNA analysis

Gala Zuccarelli; Evguenia Alechine; Mariela Caputo; Cecilia Bobillo; Daniel Corach; Andrea Sala

Aiming to detect individuals of Native American maternal or paternal ancestry a rapid screening approach has been developed. Its strategy was based on SNP typing by Real Time PCR (rt-PCR) followed by High Resolution Melting analysis (HRM). After extraction, DNA was quantitated by rt-PCR using commercial kits; samples were then submitted to two multiplex reactions in order to determine the major Native American mtDNA and Y-chromosome haplogroups by HRM. One cocktail included primers flanking nucleotide substitutions that define mtDNA haplogroup C and sub-haplogroups A2, B2, and D1. The other included primers flanking Y-SNPs M3, M269 and U179 that allowed discriminating Q and non-Q haplogroups. In all cases amplicons were <125 nucleotides long in order to increase the peak resolution. The accuracy of the results obtained was established by means of sequencing analysis of the amplicons. The new working-flow here proposed facilitates and speeds-up the screening process that may preclude a detailed sequencing analysis of particular samples, or for further molecular epidemiological investigations in which continental origin influences might be relevant.


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2011

Genetic analysis of 10 X-STRs in Argentinian population

Cecilia Bobillo; Andrea Sala; Leonor Gusmão; Daniel Corach

A set of 200 samples, 100 males and 100 females, obtained from unrelated Argentinean donors were analyzed using 10 X-STRs-DXS8378, DXS9898, DXS7133, GATA31E08, GATA172D05, DXS7423, DXS6809, DXS7132, DXS9902 and DXS6789-in order to obtain allele frequencies. Statistical analysis was performed using Powerstats and Arlequin software. The population showed no deviation from Hardy Weinberg equilibrium at all loci analyzed. Allele frequencies were compared with Spanish and Portuguese sample sets showing no statistical significant differences in four of the 10 markers analyzed. The most polymorphic marker was DXS6809 and the high values of combined power of exclusion (99.9993355% in trios and 99.9715450% in duos) reinforce the usefulness of this set of markers for kinship test and human identification.


Human Biology | 2010

Genetic Analysis of Six Communities of Mbyá-Guaraní Inhabiting Northeastern Argentina by Means of Nuclear and Mitochondrial Polymorphic Markers

Andrea Sala; Carina F. Argüelles; Miguel Marino; Cecilia Bobillo; Alberto Sergio Fenocchio; Daniel Corach


Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2008

Inferring genetic sub-structure in the population of Argentina using fifteen microsatellite loci

Miguel Marino; Andrea Sala; Cecilia Bobillo; Daniel Corach


Forensic Science International-genetics | 2011

GHEP-ISFG Proficiency Test 2011: Paper challenge on evaluation of mitochondrial DNA results

M. Montesino; Adriano Tagliabracci; Bettina Zimmermann; Leonor Gusmão; G. Burgos; B. Heinrichs; V. Prieto; M. Paredes; A. Hernandez; Sergio Cardoso; C. Vullo; Miguel Marino; M. Whittle; M. Velázquez; M. Sánchez-Simón; K. Maxud; M.J. Anjos; L.E. Vargas-Díaz; Ana María López-Parra; Cecilia Bobillo; R. García-Segura; J. Puente; S. Pedrosa; E.R. Streintenberger; F. Moreno; G. Chemale; J. Pestano; S. Merigioli; M. Espinoza; David Comas


Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2009

Mitochondrial DNA control region sequence analysis of Mataco-Guaicuru ´ speaking tribes from Argentina

Andrea Sala; Evguenia Alechine; Cecilia Bobillo; Luciano J. Merini; Carmen G. Ayala; Juan C. Acosta Ferreira; Daniel Corach


Forensic Science International: Genetics Supplement Series | 2013

Optimized mass fatalities victim identification: An airplane crash as a test case

Daniel Corach; Andrea Sala; Cecilia Bobillo; Mariela Caputo; Evguenia Alechine; M. Irisarri; Miguel Marino; E. Canónaco; C. Rodriguez

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Daniel Corach

University of Buenos Aires

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Andrea Sala

University of Buenos Aires

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Miguel Marino

National University of Cuyo

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Evguenia Alechine

University of Buenos Aires

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Leonor Gusmão

Rio de Janeiro State University

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Mariela Caputo

University of Buenos Aires

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Luciano J. Merini

University of Buenos Aires

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Alberto Sergio Fenocchio

National University of Misiones

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Ana M. Giulietti

University of Buenos Aires

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Carina F. Argüelles

National University of Misiones

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