Publications by authors named "C M Coveney"

Article Synopsis
  • Current aqueous-based tryptic digestion methods face challenges like long digestion times and variability in peptide identification and sequence coverage.
  • The Denaturing Organic Digestion (DOD) method offers a faster alternative, requiring only common solvents and reagents, without needing expensive equipment.
  • Results showed that the DOD method generated similar peptide profiles to traditional methods but identified more hydrophilic peptides; longer digestion times improved precision and peptide identification.
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Our ability to pinpoint causal variants using GWAS is dependent on understanding the dynamic epigenomic and epistatic context of each associated locus. Being the best studied skeletal locus, associates with many diseases and has a complex cis-regulatory architecture. We interrogate regulatory interactions and model disease variants and .

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Little is known regarding the future reproductive decision-making of parents of children with rare genetic conditions. Our research draws on data from an online survey and qualitative photo-elicitation interviews with families living with Noonan Syndrome. We demonstrate how genetic knowledge and prenatal genetic testing become embedded in reproductive practices.

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Background: The importance of parental diet in relation to eventual offspring health is increasing in prominence due to the increased frequency of parents of reproductive age consuming poor diets. Whilst maternal health and offspring outcome have been studied in some detail, the paternal impacts are not as well understood. A father's poor nutritional status has been shown to have negative consequences on foetal growth and development and ultimately impact the long-term adult health of the offspring.

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Considering the growing demand for egg donation (ED) and the scarcity of women coming forward as donors to meet this demand, scholars have expressed concerns that clinics may (initially) misrepresent risks to recruit more donors. Additionally, (non-)monetary incentives might be used to try to influence potential donors, which may pressure these women or cause them to dismiss their concerns. Since the internet is often the first source of information and first impressions influence individuals' choices, we examined the websites of fertility clinics to explore how they present medical risks, incentives and emotional appeals.

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