Come to Uppsala to work on dairy cattle quantitative genetics and genomics! #AnimalGenetics #AnimalBreeding #LivestockGenomics

Postdoc position, 24 months with possibility of extension, for a researcher with a PhD awarded no more than 3 years before the application date.

https://www.slu.se/en/about-slu/work-at-slu/jobs-vacancies/?rmpage=job&rmjob=10291&rmlang=UK

Jobs and vacancies at SLU. | slu.se

Jobs and vacancies at SLU. Read more about each job by clicking the job title. Please, follow the instructions closely when applying.

SLU.SE
Building in vitro tools for livestock genomics: chromosomal variation within the PK15 cell line - BMC Genomics

Background Cultured porcine cell lines are powerful tools for functional genomics and in vitro phenotypic testing of candidate causal variants. However, to be utilised for genomic or variant interrogation assays, the genome sequence and structure of cultured cell lines must be realised. In this work, we called variants and used read coverage in combination with within-sample allele frequency to detect potential aneuploidy in two immortalised porcine kidney epithelial (PK15) cell lines and in a pig embryonic fibroblast line. Results We compared two PK15 cultured cells samples: a new American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) sample and one that has been utilised and passaged within the laboratory for an extended period (> 10 years). Read coverage and within-sample allele frequencies showed that several chromosomes are fully or partially aneuploid in both PK15 lines, including potential trisomy of chromosome 4 and tetrasomy of chromosome 17. The older PK15 line showed evidence of additional structural variation and potentially clonal variation. By comparison, the pig embryonic fibroblast line was free from the gross aneuploidies seen in the PK15s. Conclusions Our results show that the PK15 cell lines examined have aneuploidies and complex structural variants in their genomes. We propose that screening for aneuploidy should be considered for cell lines, and discuss implications for livestock genomics.

BioMed Central
Now published in Peer Community Journal, #animalscience section: "The big challenge for #livestockgenomics is to make sequence data pay" https://doi.org/10.24072/pcjournal.300
The big challenge for livestock genomics is to make sequence data pay

Alright, is there anyone else on here in #AnimalGenetics or #AnimalScience (and who's looking at the hashtags)?

#LivestockGenomics #GenomicSelection #GenomicPrediction #QuantitativeGenetics #genetics #genomics #scientists and the like :)