Publications by authors named "B R Ellerbrock"

Article Synopsis
  • - Modern plant breeding combines advanced technologies like next-generation sequencing and phenomics to select the best parent plants, aiming to produce superior cultivars that farmers can easily adopt.
  • - A robust breeding database is essential for tracking various breeding materials, recording experimental and phenotypic data, storing genotypic information, and supporting analytical algorithms for breeding decisions.
  • - The Breedbase system, an open-source web application initially developed for cassava, has evolved to support multiple crops, offering a comprehensive platform for managing breeding data and enhancing decision-making processes in a digital environment.
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Modern breeding programs routinely use genome-wide information for selecting individuals to advance. The large volumes of genotypic information required present a challenge for data storage and query efficiency. Major use cases require genotyping data to be linked with trait phenotyping data.

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Objective: The purpose of this study was to quantify nine selected cariogenic bacteria in plaque from sound root surfaces and initial carious root lesions using TaqMan PCR and to analyse a putative dependence on the kind of initial periodontal treatment.

Material And Methods: Fifty-four subjects with generalized chronic periodontitis were randomly allocated to one of the following initial periodontal therapies: full-mouth disinfection, full-mouth scaling and root planing or scaling and root planing within 7 days. Plaque samples were taken before and after periodontal treatment and analysed by TaqMan PCR.

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We report the synthesis of a series of [3.2.1]azabicyclic biaryl ethers as selective agonists of alpha3- and alpha6-containing nicotinic receptors.

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Polydiacetylene (PDA)-doped calcium alginate fibers were created by the solution blending of polymerized 10,12-pentacosadiynoic acid liposomes with sodium alginate in water prior to extrusion. The liposomes maintained their blue color during wet spinning and drying of the fibers but changed to red with exposure to specific external stimuli (heat, solvent, and chemical). In the latter case, the color change only occurred when the fibers were sufficiently permeable for the reacting species to reach the interior.

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