Computationalgenetics

Computationalgenetics Kontaktinformation, kartor och vägbeskrivningar, kontaktformulär, öppettider, tjänster, betyg, foton, videor och meddelanden från Computationalgenetics, Statlig myndighet, Uppsala University, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, BMC Box 582, Uppsala.

The Computational Genomics research group lead by Örjan Carlborg at the Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, Section of Genomics, Uppsala University

We congratulate to Dr Yanjun Zan to his successful defence of his thesis this Friday - very well done! Also thanks for t...
30/04/2018

We congratulate to Dr Yanjun Zan to his successful defence of his thesis this Friday - very well done! Also thanks for the nice presentation, interesting discussion with the opponent and great dinner in the evening!

Happy to announce that our alumn Simon Forsberg got awarded for his outstanding PhD thesis by the Royal Swedish Academy ...
16/01/2018

Happy to announce that our alumn Simon Forsberg got awarded for his outstanding PhD thesis by the Royal Swedish Academy for Agriculture and Forestry (KSLA). Well deserved!

Kungl. Skogs- och Lantbruksakademiens uppgift är att med stöd av vetenskap och praktisk erfarenhet till samhällets gagn främja jordbruk och skogsbruk samt därtill knuten verksamhet.

24/11/2017

We are looking for a new Post-doc: Please feel free to help us distribute the ad to those you think might be interested!

Post doc in Computational Genetics, Uppsala University

The Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology at Uppsala University seeks applicants for a 1+1 year Post doc position in Computational Genetics. The starting date is flexible (any time during 2018). Review of applications will start immediately and the position will remain open until a suitable candidate has been found.

The Post-doc will work with the Virginia lines – a chicken population developed during a long-term (60 year) bi-directional, single-trait selection experiment. The adaptive trait is highly polygenic and selection has primarily acted on standing variants available at the onset of selection. In-depth explorations of the adaptive loci have revealed that most are complex with either tightly linked adaptive variants, multiple segregating haplotypes and/or interactions between loci. The major focus of the Post-doc will be to further dissect the genetic architecture of the adaptive trait in and model its contributions to long-term adaptation and individual phenotypes. A newly developed dataset including approximately 4000 phenotyped, pedigreed and individually low-coverage sequenced individuals from a 19 generation deep advanced intercross line between the divergently selected lines is available for this work.

The responsibilities in the Post-doc project includes standard bioinformatics work with short-read sequence data, development of software and pipelines (in R) for haplotyping, genotype imputation and linkage/association analyses to explore the genome-wide genetic basis of the adaptive trait in the deep intercross line. The Post-doc will also be involved in work to develop and explore ways to model and reveal how complex polygenic architectures contribute to long-term selection responses and individual phenotypes.

Candidates for the position must have a Ph.D. by time of employment. A suitable educational background will likely include computational biology/bioinformatics as part of, for example, PhD studies or Post-doctoral work in human/animal/plant quantitative/population/evolutionary genetics, systems biology or equivalent. Interested candidates are encouraged to submit a letter of interest explaining their motivation for working on this project and suitability for the position. This should be accompanied by a C.V. and a description of relevant undergraduate and graduate projects that the applicant has been involved in.

The letter of interest, or any questions about the position, should be directed to Prof. Örjan Carlborg, Department of Medical Biochemistry and Microbiology, Uppsala University; [email protected]. Review will begin as soon as received and continue until the position is filled.

Selected references of relevance to the project are1-6:

1. Carlborg, Ö., Jacobsson, L., Åhgren, P., Siegel, P. & Andersson, L. Epistasis and the release of genetic variation during long-term selection. Nat Genet 38, 418–420 (2006).

2. Le Rouzic, A., Siegel, P. B. & Carlborg, Ö. Phenotypic evolution from genetic polymorphisms in a radial network architecture. BMC Biol. 5, 50 (2007).

3. Johansson, A. M., Pettersson, M. E., Siegel, P. B. & Carlborg, Ö. Genome-wide effects of long-term divergent selection. PLoS Genet 6, e1001188 (2010).

4. Pettersson, M., Besnier, F., Siegel, P. B. & Carlborg, Ö. Replication and explorations of high-order epistasis using a large advanced intercross line pedigree. PLoS Genet 7, e1002180 (2011).

5. Sheng, Z., Pettersson, M. E., Honaker, C. F., Siegel, P. B. & Carlborg, Ö. Standing genetic variation as a major contributor to adaptation in the Virginia chicken lines selection experiment. Genome Biol. 16, 219 (2015).

6. Zan, Y. et al. Artificial Selection Response due to Polygenic Adaptation from a Multilocus, Multiallelic Genetic Architecture. Mol Biol Evol 34, 2678–2689 (2017).

Press-release describing our latest work with the Virginia chicken lines that is now available online in Molecular Biolo...
19/07/2017

Press-release describing our latest work with the Virginia chicken lines that is now available online in Molecular Biology and Evolution: https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2017-07/mbae-emc071117.php

Taking advantage of a special experimentally-bred population, the Virginia chicken lines, Uppsala University scientist Orjan Carlborg has now led an international research to achieve a better understanding of the genetic architecture behind chicken weight.

31/03/2017

Nicely written News and Views in Nature Genetics that discusses our latest study on epistasis in yeast http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v49/n4/full/ng.3829.html

A study of genetic variation in yeast has identified key quantitative trait loci (QTLs) that suppress the effects of variation at multiple other loci. These loci prove essential to accurately modeling yeast growth in response to different environments.

Uppsala Nya Tidning uppmärksammade också vår senaste jäststudie i en nyhetsnotis. Simon Forsberg borde självklart också ...
27/02/2017

Uppsala Nya Tidning uppmärksammade också vår senaste jäststudie i en nyhetsnotis. Simon Forsberg borde självklart också ha uppmärksammats i denna artikel också, men av princip så har UNT bara med en representant från forskargruppen när de summerar de senaste forskningsnyheterna. http://www.unt.se/nyheter/uppsala/gener-jobbar-ofta-i-natverk-4562571.aspx

Gener samverkar ofta i stora nätverk. Effekten av en och samma genvariant kan därför skilja sig mellan olika individer beroende på hur just deras nätverk ser ut.

27/02/2017

Great to see the last article in Simon Forsbergs thesis published today in Nature genetics! http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/vaop/ncurrent/full/ng.3800.html

Orjan Carlborg and colleagues analyze genotype and phenotype data from 4,390 yeast segregants from a cross between laboratory and vineyard strains to estimate how higher-order genetic interactions contribute to complex trait variation. They find networks of epistatic loci and show that accounting fo...

On Friday January 13, Mr Simon Forsberg became Dr Simon Forsberg after an impressive thesis defence. Tomorrow Jan 31 is ...
30/01/2017

On Friday January 13, Mr Simon Forsberg became Dr Simon Forsberg after an impressive thesis defence. Tomorrow Jan 31 is his last day in the Computational genetics group and we would therefore like to thank him for all the great work he has done while in the group & wish him all the best of luck in his future career!

25/01/2017

The first Computational genetics paper by Mette Lillie and co-workers and our first paper on the Virginia antibody lines "Genome-wide standing variation facilitates long-term response to bidirectional selection for antibody response in chickens" is now out in BMC Genomics. Check it out! https://bmcgenomics.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12864-016-3414-7

Long-term selection experiments provide a powerful approach to gain empirical insights into adaptation, allowing researchers to uncover the targets of selection and infer their contributions to the mode and tempo of adaptation. Here we implement a pooled genome re-sequencing approach to investigate…

09/01/2017

On Thursday December 12 (BMC C8:305), Julien Ayroles (https://lsi.princeton.edu/faculty/julien-f.-ayroles) will present a seminar on his latest results on the Drosophila DGRP lines as well as analyses exploring the presence of variance-heterogeneity associations in humans. Please join us for this exciting seminar!

Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and the Lewis-Sigler Institute for Integrative Genomics. Areas of Research: Genotypic variation in co-regulated networks and how it gives rise to phenotypic variation. Department|Program:Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Lewis-Sigler for Int...

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Uppsala University, Department Of Medical Biochemistry And Microbiology, BMC Box 582
Uppsala
75123

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Måndag 08:00 - 16:00
Tisdag 08:00 - 16:00
Onsdag 08:00 - 16:00
Torsdag 08:00 - 16:00
Fredag 08:00 - 16:00

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