Sentences with phrase «hybridization as»

The company that launched America's first hybrid in December 1999 then fell behind Toyota in hybridization as it also introduced a 2004 Accord Hybrid V6 only to cancel it in 2007 now needs no excuses for its latest model.
Think of «hybridization as a way of life.»
The wheat we use today has also undergone extensive hybridization as a crop.
Yet, advancements in genomic testing tools have revealed naturally occurring hybridization as a fairly common...
Yet, advancements in genomic testing tools have revealed naturally occurring hybridization as a fairly common phenomenon — with a role in natural selection, in some cases.

Not exact matches

Cultural differentiation or lasting difference, cultural convergence or growing sameness, cultural hybridization or on - going mixing — each of these represents a particular politics of difference: as lasting and immutable, as erasable and being erased, and as mixing and in the process of generating new, translocal forms of difference.
Teff is known as an ancient grain, one that has survived through the centuries without much hybridization or processing.
Modern wheat varieties are classified as «hexaploid,» having six sets of chromosomes, due to a long history of hybridization.
Well, spelt emerged as a result of the hybridization of emmer and wild goat grass.
I mean, it's as «natural» for us to forage for or grow organic food as it is «natural» for us to use our highly intelligent and adaptive brains to experiment with hybridization and genetic modification in agriculture.
The original sexless females, known as parthenogens, come from the hybridization of two separate lizard lines.
The SureSeq mix increases the success and accuracy of hybridization - based NGS for FFPE samples by repairing damage such as nicks and gaps, oxidized bases, blocked 3» ends, and deamination of cytosine to uracil.
And the outcomes «may alter the view of hybridization in animals as some form of mistake,» comments Loeske Kruuk of the University of Edinburgh, «because it is now clear that we can not take the consequences for fitness at face value.»
«In the tree frog species studied by us, it is amazing that the mating and hybridizations appear to happen mainly in the Polish lowlands,» says Stöck, «while they rarely do so in Greece, where these two species meet each other as well; however, presumably since distinctly longer periods of time.»
As a result, it was possible to use in situ hybridization to trace the cells expressing ELH to their site of origin.
Instead, gene variants will need to be introduced by hybridization with other diverse strains of S. cerevisiae, says Borneman, such as those found in natural fermentations of African palm wine and other environmental isolates.
The level of discordance among the nuclear and mitochondrial markers from the three species, the authors assert, is best explained as an instance of natural hybridization.
«I think we're going to see more hybridization in the future,» Hanna adds, «so these owls are serving as a case study for how species that have been isolated for millions of years might interact in the face of a rapidly changing world.»
In situ hybridization and subsequent imaging were carried out as described previously (65) with probes against eve1 (66), gata2 (67), and foxb1.2 (68).
In situ hybridization for hermes was performed as previously described [7], [39].
As the variance of admixture has been used to infer the timing of hybridization and sex - biased admixture, we consider the implications of assortative mating for inferring population history and speciation.
(A — L) In situ hybridization of Acks in each brain area shown as Figure 4B in the brains of workers exposed to 46 °C heat (A, D, G, and J), workers whose antennae are deprived before heat - exposure (B, E, H, and K), and workers exposed to IAA (C, F, I, and L).
Contribution to the understanding of how the evolution of gene families relates to functional divergence, including the fate of duplicated genes, horizontal transfer and interspecies hybridization, as well as the characterization of the ancestral patterns of evolution among archosaurs, and the discovery of the late acquisition of mitochondria in eukaryotes (Gabaldón's group, Science 2014, PLoS Biology 2015, PLoS Genetics 2015, Nature 2016).
A previous study using fluorescent in situ hybridization demonstrated that kakusei transcript signals are localized exclusively in the nuclei, suggesting that the kakusei transcript functions as a nuclear noncoding RNA [13].
In situ hybridization was performed as previously described (Kouchi and Hata, 1993).
A. Nadler, J. Strohmeier and U. Diederichsen 8 - Vinyl - 2 ′ - deoxyguanosine as a fluorescent 2 ′ - deoxyguanosine mimic for investigating DNA hybridization and topology Angew.
Akey added that hybridization between Neanderthals and modern man is still a valid source of worry, as those ancient relics still result in greater genomic complexity.
One of the most striking aspects of this study is that hybridization between two distinct species led to the development of a new lineage that after only two generations behaved as any other species of Darwin's finches, explained Leif Andersson, a professor at Uppsala University who is also affiliated with the Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences and Texas A&M University.
The high resolution that is achieved by these techniques, particularly by microarray technologies such as array comparative genomic hybridization, is blurring the traditional distinction between cytogenetics and molecular biology.
We did the first in situ hybridization to chromosomes using the gigantic polytene chromosomes from the salivary glands of the lower dipteran Sciara, as well as Drosophila.
The development of high - throughput screening methods such as array - based comparative genome hybridization (array CGH) allows screening of the human genome for copy - number changes.
The method scales up a technique known as single - molecule fluorescence in situ hybridization (smFISH) and determines where RNA transcripts are located in the cell, providing important clues about their biological function.
The lab regularly uses techniques such as dye backfills, immunohistochemistry, in situ hybridization, PCR, and confocal microscopy.
The reliability score of the antibodies in mouse brain atlas is scored as Supported or Uncertain depending on support from in situ hybridization data (Allen brain atlas) and / or previous published data, UniProtKB / Swiss - Prot database.
But the continuity - with - hybridization model is countered by overwhelming genetic data that point to Africa as the wellspring of modern humans.
In this model, known as multiregionalism or continuity with hybridization, hominins descended from H. erectus in Asia interbred with incoming groups from Africa and other parts of Eurasia, and their progeny gave rise to the ancestors of modern east Asians, says Wu.
The biological testing sample is processed further by linear amplification and biotin - labeling during in vitro transcription (IVT) to generate a single strand antisense RNA (aRNA) as a target for chip hybridization.
Microarray hybridization patterns were interpreted using hierarchical cluster analysis as previously described [65], [66].
I'm concerned primarily about grain - based toxins such as inflammatory lectins in wheat, genetically modified corn, and changes to the prolamine content of grains since hybridization techniques have taken hold.
Unlike modern grains such as wheat, corn, and rice, ancient grains have never been processed through hybridization or genetic modification; they're grown just as they were thousands — if not millions — of years ago.
And it turns out, despite hundreds of hybridizations of durum wheat in the past century, its gluten content is still approximately the same as it was, at the turn of the century.
Milk is not as healthful today because of the hybridization of cows.
Well what happens is, the rapeseed — actually as it was brought over Canada, had gone to a hybridization form of growth and process, form of genetically engineering and it's now for industrial manufacturing food product purposes — is now being highly heated to allow for a longer shelf life, but it actually makes it go rancid as a process.
That doesn't mean wheat hasn't changed over the last half - dozen decades, though — it has, as the result of a process called hybridization.
There are lots of other changes this represents too, such as the presence of chemicals in our food supply (pesticides, herbicides, xenoestrogens, etc) that didn't exist in the ancient diet, as well as the dramatic changes caused by hybridization of many of our foods, which creates versions of fruits and vegetables bred more for size, sweetness, and appearance as opposed to natural nutrition... this aspect has decreased micronutrient content in the modern day food supply (just look at wild blueberries vs cultivated blueberries as an example of that with wild berries coming in at more than DOUBLE the antioxidants from ORAC testing).
Artichoke cultivars - such as «Green Symphony», «Purple Tempo», «Opal», and «Concerto» - are the result of a long process of hybridization and are propagated by seeds that can be grown annually and produce a limited yield.
Good old Norman Borlaug, through successful hybridization, denatured the gluten and created a protein that our immune systems do not recognize as a normal food.
* Hybridization is a type of genetic modification but it's not the same as genetically modified organisms (GMOs).
Trends toward accommodation, adaptation, and hybridization will likely increase as U.S. education policy seeks to catch up to the sweeping demographic, technological, and economic changes taking place.
At the dawn of a new era devoted to downsizing, hybridization, and electromobility, V - 8s will soon be condemned as fossils from a wasteful past — so get one like the charismatic, turbocharged direct - injection, dry - sump 32 - valve 3,982 cc unit that is the essence of the AMG GT S while you can.
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