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Articles tagged G3 Journal
(227 results)

  • dionne-et-al

    New in G3: maize, master regulators, and mutagenesis

    Check out the November issue of G3! Table of Contents Investigations Genomic Prediction of Single Crosses in the Early Stages of a Maize Hybrid Breeding Pipeline Dnyaneshwar C. Kadam, Sarah M. Potts, Martin O. Bohn, Alexander E. Lipka, and Aaron J. Lorenz G3 November 2016 6:3443-3453; Early Online September 19, 2016 doi:10.1534/g3.116.031286 Abstract | Full…

  • GSA Journals Spotlight 2015

    The GSA Journals, GENETICS and G3: Genes|Genomes|Genetics, are proud to present our annual Spotlight booklets for research published in 2015. Each Spotlight is a showcase of the excellent research and scholarship published over the course of the year, along with a selection of striking images submitted by our authors. Browse the 2015 GENETICS Spotlight. Browse the 2015 G3 Spotlight.      …

  • New in G3: glucose biosynthesis, neural tube defects, and seizure suppression

    Check out the October issue of G3! Table of Contents Call for Papers Multiparental Populations: A Call for Papers G3 October 2016 6:3015; doi:10.1534/g3.116.035022 Full Text | Full Text (PDF) Investigations A Drosophila LexA Enhancer-Trap Resource for Developmental Biology and Neuroendocrine Research Lutz Kockel, Lutfi M. Huq, Anika Ayyar, Emma Herold, Elle MacAlpine, Madeline Logan,…

  • Photo by Daniel Stockman via Flickr. Used under Creative Commons 2.0 terms.

    Friendly dogs with floppy ears: The domestication syndrome

    The mild temperament that distinguishes the family dog from its wolf ancestors is just one of a whole array of traits that seem to have evolved during domestication. Domestication syndrome refers to the suite of characteristics commonly observed in domestic animals, including docility, shorter muzzles, smaller teeth, smaller and floppier ears, and an altered estrous…

  • New in G3: coffee genome, dog diseases, and mouse infertility

    Check out the September issue of G3! Investigations Retrotransposon Proliferation Coincident with the Evolution of Dioecy in Asparagus Alex Harkess, Francesco Mercati, Loredana Abbate, Michael McKain, J. Chris Pires, Tea Sala, Francesco Sunseri, Agostino Falavigna, and Jim Leebens-Mack G3 September 2016 6:2679-2685; Early Online June 24, 2016 doi:10.1534/g3.116.030239 Abstract | Full Text | Full Text…

  • New in G3: mushrooms, morphogenesis, and micronuclei

    Check out the August issue of G3! Investigations Genetic Architecture of Resistance to Stripe Rust in a Global Winter Wheat Germplasm Collection Peter Bulli, Junli Zhang, Shiaoman Chao, Xianming Chen, and Michael Pumphrey G3 August 2016 6:2237-2253; Early Online May 25, 2016 doi:10.1534/g3.116.028407 Abstract | Full Text | Full Text (PDF) | Supplemental Material Meiotic…

  • Meet the editors at TAGC

    Got a hot manuscript or a burning question for a GENETICS or G3 editor? Just want to talk about scholarly publishing in general? Here’s how you can track down an editor at The Allied Genetics Conference this week: Watch out for ribbons GENETICS and G3 Editors will be wearing silver “Editor” ribbons on their name…

  • Newborn Shetland pony foal not affected by skeletal atavism. © Copyright Mike Pennington and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons License.

    Genetic test helps ponies leave the past behind

    For the past several decades, Shetland ponies’ collective past had caught up with them. A portion of the population of these miniature horses is affected by atavism, a phenomenon in which ancient characteristics are accidentally revived by mutations. Traits reincarnated in this way sometimes interact disastrously with the genetic background of the modern organism. For…

  • New in G3: Drosophila doublesex, Shetland pony SHOX, and SNP-SNP interactions

    Check out the July issue of G3! ForestPMPlot: A Flexible Tool for Visualizing Heterogeneity Between Studies in Meta-analysis Eun Yong Kang, Yurang Park, Xiao Li, Ayellet V. Segrè, Buhm Han, and Eleazar Eskin G3 July 2016 6:1793-1798; Early Online May 18, 2016 doi:10.1534/g3.116.029439 Abstract | Full Text | Full Text (PDF) Sex Differences in Drosophila…

  • Molecular model of penicillin, the first antibiotic discovered. Later, antimicrobial peptides were also found to have antibiotic properties. By Science Museum London / Science and Society Picture Library [CC BY-SA 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons.

    How bacteria dodge new antibiotic candidates

    Antibiotics, a vital tool for fighting infections, were originally products of nature—the first antibiotic was serendipitously discovered in mold contaminating a bacterial culture. As antibiotic resistance becomes an increasingly serious threat, scientists are attempting to wring another type of pathogen-fighting drug from the wild: antimicrobial peptides. Antimicrobial peptides, or AMPs, are found in almost every…

  • The pharynx in the wild type worm (top) is shorter than the pharynx in the mutant worm (bottom). Image credit: modified from figure 1 in Shibata et al.

    Stretchy cells underlie organ development

    Animals’ complex body plans come at a cost: their development is elaborate and must be delicately controlled. One critical aspect of development is size and shape control—every organ needs to fit in its place. The process requires the orchestration of a dizzying number of pathways, and understanding even a single component is far from trivial.…