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Featured researches published by Leif Andersson.


Veterinary Journal | 2011

LUPA: A European initiative taking advantage of the canine genome architecture for unravelling complex disorders in both human and dogs

Anne Sophie Lequarré; Leif Andersson; Catherine André; Merete Fredholm; Christophe Hitte; Tosso Leeb; Hannes Lohi; Kerstin Lindblad-Toh; Michel Georges

The domestic dog offers a unique opportunity to explore the genetic basis of disease, morphology and behaviour. Humans share many diseases with our canine companions, making dogs an ideal model organism for comparative disease genetics. Using newly developed resources, genome-wide association studies in dog breeds are proving to be exceptionally powerful. Towards this aim, veterinarians and geneticists from 12 European countries are collaborating to collect and analyse the DNA from large cohorts of dogs suffering from a range of carefully defined diseases of relevance to human health. This project, named LUPA, has already delivered considerable results. The consortium has collaborated to develop a new high density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array. Mutations for four monogenic diseases have been identified and the information has been utilised to find mutations in human patients. Several complex diseases have been mapped and fine mapping is underway. These findings should ultimately lead to a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying complex diseases in both humans and their best friend.


Journal of Internal Medicine | 2012

How selective sweeps in domestic animals provide new insight into biological mechanisms.

Leif Andersson

Abstract.u2002 Andersson L (Uppsala University, Uppsala; and Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala; Sweden). How selective sweeps in domestic animals provide new insight into biological mechanisms (Review). J Intern Med 2012; 271: 1–14.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2018

Elevated Proportions of Deleterious Genetic Variation in Domestic Animals and Plants

Takashi Makino; Carl-Johan Rubin; Miguel Carneiro; Erik Axelsson; Leif Andersson; Matthew T. Webster

Abstract A fraction of genetic variants segregating in any population are deleterious, which negatively impacts individual fitness. The domestication of animals and plants is associated with population bottlenecks and artificial selection, which are predicted to increase the proportion of deleterious variants. However, the extent to which this is a general feature of domestic species is unclear. Here, we examine the effects of domestication on the prevalence of deleterious variation using pooled whole-genome resequencing data from five domestic animal species (dog, pig, rabbit, chicken, and silkworm) and two domestic plant species (rice and soybean) compared with their wild ancestors. We find significantly reduced genetic variation and increased proportion of nonsynonymous amino acid changes in all but one of the domestic species. These differences are observable across a range of allele frequencies, both common and rare. We find proportionally more single nucleotide polymorphisms in highly conserved elements in domestic species and a tendency for domestic species to harbor a higher proportion of changes classified as damaging. Our findings most likely reflect an increased incidence of deleterious variants in domestic species, which is most likely attributable to population bottlenecks that lead to a reduction in the efficacy of selection. An exception to this pattern is displayed by European domestic pigs, which do not show traces of a strong population bottleneck and probably continued to exchange genes with wild boar populations after domestication. The results presented here indicate that an elevated proportion of deleterious variants is a common, but not ubiquitous, feature of domestic species.


Archive | 2004

Selecting animals for desired genotypic or potential phenotypic properties based on a single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in intron 3 of the IGF2 gene

Leif Andersson; Goran Andersson; Michel Georges; Nadine Buys


Archive | 2010

Selecting animals for desired genotypic or potential phenotypic properties

Leif Andersson; Goran Andersson; Michel Georges; Nadine Buys


Archive | 2017

Multiple viruses rely on the stress-induced protein ZC3H11A for efficient replication

Shady Younis; Wael Kamel; Hao Wang; Di Yu; Robert Daniels; Magnus Essand; Jorma Hinkula; Göran Akusjärvi; Leif Andersson


Archive | 2017

Changes in myotube development and mitochondrial activity in mouse C2C12 cells after ZBED6 silencing is largely due to increased IGF2 expression

Shady Younis; Xuan Wang; Rakan Naboulsi; Mårten Larsson; Ernest Sargsyan; Peter Bergsten; Nils Welsh; Leif Andersson


Archive | 2015

selected for growth in an intercross between chicken lines divergently QTL analysis of body composition and metabolic traits

Hee-Bok Park; Lina Jacobsson; Per Wahlberg; P. B. Siegel; Leif Andersson; B. Siegel; Pablo M. Garcia-Roves; Juleen R. Zierath; D. Michael Denbow; Svante Pääbo; Frank W. Albert; Mohammad Harun-Or-Rashid


Archive | 2014

The effect of a domestication related mutation in the thyroid stimulating hormone receptor (TSHR) on photoperiodic response and reproduction in chicken

Anna-Carin Karlsson; Amir Fallahshahroudi; Hanna Johnsen; Jenny Hagenblad; Dominic Wright; Leif Andersson; Per Jensen


Archive | 2014

The transcriptional modulator ZBED6 regulates cell cycle and growth of human colorectal cancer cells

Muhammad Akhtar Ali; Shady Younis; Ola Wallerman; Rajesh Kumar Gupta; Leif Andersson; Tobias Sjöblom

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