Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Sirkka-Liisa Varvio is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Sirkka-Liisa Varvio.


Mammalian Genome | 1997

A medium-density genetic linkage map of the bovine genome

W. Barendse; D. Vaiman; Stephen J. Kemp; Yoshikazu Sugimoto; S. M. Armitage; J. L. Williams; H. S. Sun; A. Eggen; Morris Agaba; S. A. Aleyasin; Mark Band; M. D. Bishop; J. Buitkamp; K. Byrne; F. Collins; L. Cooper; W. Coppettiers; B. Denys; R. D. Drinkwater; K. Easterday; C. Elduque; Sean Ennis; G. Erhardt; L. Ferretti; N. Flavin; Q. Gao; Michel Georges; R. Gurung; B. Harlizius; G. Hawkins

A cattle genetic linkage map was constructed which covers more than 95 percent of the bovine genome at medium density. Seven hundred and forty six DNA polymorphisms were genotyped in cattle families which comprise 347 individuals in full sibling pedigrees. Seven hundred and three of the loci are linked to at least one other locus. All linkage groups are assigned to chromosomes, and all are orientated with regards to the centromere. There is little overall difference in the lengths of the bull and cow linkage maps although there are individual differences between maps of chromosomes. One hundred and sixty polymorphisms are in or near genes, and the resultant genome-wide comparative analyses indicate that while there is greater conservation of synteny between cattle and humans compared with mice, the conservation of gene order between cattle and humans is much less than would be expected from the conservation of synteny. This map provides a basis for high-resolution mapping of the bovine genome with physical resources such as Yeast and Bacterial Artificial Chromosomes as well as providing the underpinning for the interpolation of information from the Human Genome Project.USDA-MARC family and data for validating this family. P. Creighton, C. Skidmore, T. Holm, and A. Georgoudis provided some validation data for the BOVMAP families. R. Fries, S. Johnson, S. Solinas Toldo, and A. Mezzelani kindly made some of their FISH assignments available before publication. We wish to thank all those researchers who kindly sent us probes and DNA primers.


Mammalian Genome | 1994

A set of 99 cattle microsatellites: characterization, synteny mapping, and polymorphism

D. Vaiman; D. Mercier; Katayoun Moazami-Goudarzi; A. Eggen; R. Ciampolini; A. Lépingle; R. Velmala; J. Kaukinen; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; P. Martin; Hubert Levéziel; Gérard Guérin

Cattle microsatellite clones (136) were isolated from cosmid (10) and plasmid (126) libraries and sequenced. The dinucleotide repeats were studied in each of these sequences and compared with dinucleotide repeats found in other vertebrate species where information was available. The distribution in cattle was similar to that described for other mammals, such as rat, mouse, pig, or human. A major difference resides in the number of sequences present in the bovine genome, which seemed at best one-third as large as in other species. Oligonucleotide primers (117 pairs) were synthesized, and a PCR product of expected size was obtained for 88 microsatellite sequences (75%). Synteny or chromosome assignment was searched for each locus with PCR amplification on a panel of 36 hamster/bovine somatic cell hybrids. Of our bovine microsatellites, eighty-six could be assigned to synteny groups of chromosomes. In addition, 10 other microsatellites—HEL 5, 6, 9, 11, 12, 13 (Kaukinen and Varvio 1993), HEL 4, 7, 14, 15—as well as the microsatellite found in the κ-casein gene (Fries et al. 1990) were mapped on the hybrids. Microsatellite polymorphism was checked on at leat 30 unrelated animals of different breeds. Almost all the autosomal and X Chr microsatellites displayed polymorphism, with the number of alleles varying between two and 44. We assume that these microsatellites could be very helpful in the construction of a primary public linkage map of the bovine genome, with an aim of finding markers for Economic Trait Loci (ETL) in cattle.


Cladistics | 2005

Phylogeny of Mysis (Crustacea, Mysida): history of continental invasions inferred from molecular and morphological data

Asta Audzijonyte; Jakob Damgaard; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; Jouni K. Vainio; Risto Väinölä

We studied the phylogenetic history of opossum shrimps of the genus Mysis Latreille, 1802 (Crustacea: Mysida) using parsimony analyses of morphological characters, DNA sequence data from mitochondrial (16S, COI and CytB) and nuclear genes (ITS2, 18S), and eight allozyme loci. With these data we aimed to resolve a long‐debated question of the origin of the non‐marine (continental) taxa in the genus, i.e., “glacial relicts” in circumpolar postglacial lakes and “arctic immigrants” in the Caspian Sea. A simultaneous analysis of the data sets gave a single tree supporting monophyly of all continental species, as well as monophyly of the taxa from circumpolar lakes and from the Caspian Sea. A clade of three circumarctic marine species was sister group to the continental taxa, whereas Atlantic species had more distant relationships to the others. Small molecular differentiation among the morphologically diverse endemic species from the Caspian Sea suggested their recent speciation, while the phenotypically more uniform “glacial relict” species from circumpolar lakes (Mysis relicta group) showed deep molecular divergences. For the length‐variable ITS2 region both direct optimization and a priori alignment procedures gave similar topologies, although the former approach provided a better overall resolution. In terms of partitioned Bremer support (PBS), mitochondrial protein coding genes provided the largest contribution (83%) to the total tree resolution. This estimate however, appears to be partly spurious, due to the concerted inheritance of mitochondrial characters and probable cases of introgression or ancestral polymorphism.


Heredity | 2000

Phylogenetic information in inter-SINE and inter-SSR fingerprints of the artiodactyla and evolution of the bov-tA SINE.

Silja Kostia; Marja Ruohonen-Lehto; Risto Väinölä; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio

Various interspersed repeated sequences and elements (IRSs) can be utilized to generate PCR-based multilocus fingerprint profiles by amplifying the interelement segments, using primers matching the elements themselves. We assessed the utility of inter-IRS fingerprinting in phylogenetic comparisons among six artiodactyl species using several primers derived from two abundant genomic components: the Bov-tA short interspersed nuclear elements (SINEs) and simple sequence repeats or microsatellites (SSRs). Character- and distance-based analyses of the fingerprint data produced trees conforming to the established phylogenetic relationships of species. The strength of phylogenetic signal from different primers varied; combining data from different experiments resulted in robust trees. Within the Cervidae, the hierarchical relationship [(Odocoileus, Rangifer) Alces] was strongly supported. Both methods appear useful tools for systematic studies at time scales <30 Myr. To elucidate the material basis of inter-SINE fingerprints, we obtained the first sequences of the ‘bovid’ Bov-tA element also from two cervids (reindeer and white-tailed deer) and analysed their relationship to a number of paralogous bovid elements. The differences among sequences, both intra- and interspecific, were relatively high (mean 18.5%); the sequences showed no clear clustering with the species from which they had been isolated. Most individual elements probably date back to the cervid–bovid ancestor >25 Myr ago, which is in line with the observed fingerprint distributions.


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2009

Evolution of the Capsular Regulatory Genes in Streptococcus pneumoniae

Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; Kari Auranen; Elja Arjas; P. Helena Mäkelä

The major pneumococcal virulence determinant is its capsule, and pneumococcal epidemiology is based on 91 capsular serotypes, each corresponding to the structure of the capsular polysaccharide determined by the type-specific capsular genome. Here, we provide the beginnings of an approach to intertwine serotype epidemiology, capsular regulatory gene characteristics on the basis of existing sequence information, and the reanalysis of published epidemiological data. We present an approach to explain epidemiological characteristics of serotypes on the basis of genetic differences in their capsular regulatory genes. The part of the capsular genome that regulates capsular expression falls into 2 highly divergent sequence clans: the ancestral pneumococcal capsular regulatory gene sequences (present in 49 serotypes) and laterally transferred sequences (present in 32 serotypes). Our survey of epidemiological data showed a tendency of the ancestral type of the capsular regulatory genome to be associated with carriage and the laterally transferred sequences to be associated with invasive disease isolates. The regulatory gene region shows mosaic structures that have signatures of recent recombination events, reminiscent of structures known from antibiotic resistance genes.


Mammalian Genome | 1997

SINE targeting of bovine microsatellites from bovine/rodent hybrid cell lines

Silja Kostia; Johanna Vilkki; Minna Pirinen; James E. Womack; W. Barendse; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio

~Department of Biosciences, Division of Genetics, P.O. Box 56, Viikinkaari 5, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Helsinkl, Finland 2Animal Breeding Section, Agricultural Research Centre, 31600 Jokioinen, Finland 3Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas 77643, USA 4CSIRO, Division of Tropical Animal Production, University of Queensland, Brisbane 4072, Australia


PLOS ONE | 2009

Full likelihood analysis of genetic risk with variable age at onset disease - combining population-based registry data and demographic information.

Janne Pitkäniemi; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; Jukka Corander; Nella Lehti; Jukka Partanen; Eva Tuomilehto-Wolf; Jaakko Tuomilehto; Andrew J. Thomas; Elja Arjas

Background In genetic studies of rare complex diseases it is common to ascertain familial data from population based registries through all incident cases diagnosed during a pre-defined enrollment period. Such an ascertainment procedure is typically taken into account in the statistical analysis of the familial data by constructing either a retrospective or prospective likelihood expression, which conditions on the ascertainment event. Both of these approaches lead to a substantial loss of valuable data. Methodology and Findings Here we consider instead the possibilities provided by a Bayesian approach to risk analysis, which also incorporates the ascertainment procedure and reference information concerning the genetic composition of the target population to the considered statistical model. Furthermore, the proposed Bayesian hierarchical survival model does not require the considered genotype or haplotype effects be expressed as functions of corresponding allelic effects. Our modeling strategy is illustrated by a risk analysis of type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) in the Finnish population-based on the HLA-A, HLA-B and DRB1 human leucocyte antigen (HLA) information available for both ascertained sibships and a large number of unrelated individuals from the Finnish bone marrow donor registry. The heterozygous genotype DR3/DR4 at the DRB1 locus was associated with the lowest predictive probability of T1D free survival to the age of 15, the estimate being 0.936 (0.926; 0.945 95% credible interval) compared to the average population T1D free survival probability of 0.995. Significance The proposed statistical method can be modified to other population-based family data ascertained from a disease registry provided that the ascertainment process is well documented, and that external information concerning the sizes of birth cohorts and a suitable reference sample are available. We confirm the earlier findings from the same data concerning the HLA-DR3/4 related risks for T1D, and also provide here estimated predictive probabilities of disease free survival as a function of age.


Genome | 1995

Microsatellite sequences in a conifer, Pinus sylvestris

Silja Kostia; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; Pekka Vakkari; Pertti Pulkkinen


Animal Genetics | 2009

Eight polymorphic bovine microsatellites.

Kaukinen J; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio


Hereditas | 2004

Deveploping Microsatellite Markers for Insect Population Structure: Complex Variation in a Checkerspot Butterfly

Jukka U. Palo; Sirkka-Liisa Varvio; Ilkka Hansk; Risto Väinölä

Collaboration


Dive into the Sirkka-Liisa Varvio's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Elja Arjas

University of Helsinki

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pekka Vakkari

Finnish Forest Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Pertti Pulkkinen

Finnish Forest Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Eggen

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Vaiman

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W. Barendse

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge