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1 requencies of genomic variants responding to artificial selection.
2 promotes rapid phenotypic evolution through artificial selection.
3 ates that 2 to 4% of these genes experienced artificial selection.
4 gh fixation of discrete mutations by intense artificial selection.
5 ghout the maize genome have been affected by artificial selection.
6 o produce populations of optimized models by artificial selection.
7 that light responsiveness may be a target of artificial selection.
8 ents is the study of correlated responses to artificial selection.
9 ve been an important source of variation for artificial selection.
10 increasing the rate of genetic gain through artificial selection.
11 es identified as both targets of natural and artificial selection.
12 g the rate of genetic gain through intensive artificial selection.
13 ing yield and fruit size are still not under artificial selection.
14 n bottlenecks, recent inbreeding, and strong artificial selection.
15 tion, representing a very broadly-applicable artificial selection.
16 c breed for beef production in Korea through artificial selection.
17 ting that the former likely were targeted by artificial selection.
18 omesticated, ideal for testing the effect of artificial selection.
19 ivity that readily emerge through natural or artificial selection.
20 n and polyploidization event responded under artificial selection.
21 is thaliana, which has not been subjected to artificial selection.
22 nges since the Famine, from both natural and artificial selection.
23 on related to tree and seed size experienced artificial selection.
24 s dominated by known bottlenecks and intense artificial selection.
25 ces likely associated with domestication and artificial selection.
26 ight reflect a recent selective sweep due to artificial selection.
27 portant for both evolutionary prediction and artificial selection.
28 l and genetic perturbations, and natural and artificial selection.
29 cestor's alleles that have been subjected to artificial selection.
30 ent a novel approach to map trait loci using artificial selection.
31 of the main factors driving both natural and artificial selection.
32 some generations by random sampling prior to artificial selection.
33 erent from a regular selective sweep because artificial selection acts on alleles that may have been
35 ty has been achieved in crop species through artificial selection and adaptation to modern agronomic
36 les with minimal pleiotropic costs may evade artificial selection and be retained in crop germplasm.
37 variation in resistance from isofemale line, artificial selection and classical genetic studies are r
38 sary for predicting responses to natural and artificial selection and disease risk in human populatio
39 omestication is one of the greatest feats of artificial selection and evolution, wherein a weedy plan
40 on in segment proportions, their response to artificial selection and experimental blockade of putati
41 teractions, and driven by natural selection, artificial selection and genome size variation, but like
42 tication is one of the strongest examples of artificial selection and has produced some of the most e
44 These pathways may retain the signature of artificial selection and may lack genetic variation in c
45 Singing Dogs, have undergone less intensive artificial selection and retain more ancestral character
47 lutionary adaptations underlying natural and artificial selection, and also determines individual sus
49 onary lens, including how natural selection, artificial selection, and gene flow shape feral genomes,
50 Extreme phenotypic diversity, a history of artificial selection, and socioeconomic value make domes
51 leration of response in early generations of artificial selection are predicted; further, the pattern
55 gone domestication and extensive natural and artificial selection by adapting to various environments
58 ss of animal domestication, both natural and artificial selection cause variation in allele frequenci
60 or how WRC remains responsive to natural and artificial selection, despite low genetic diversity.
62 ave adapted in response to local natural and artificial selection during a 40-year breeding program.
64 are thought to have arisen from mutation and artificial selection during and after domestication from
67 ies, Prunus persica (peach), indicating that artificial selection during domestication may have acted
71 erlap between the genes that were targets of artificial selection during the adaptation of maize to t
72 y to interrogate the genomic consequences of artificial selection early in the domestication process.
75 lection and adult fitness, we carried out an artificial selection experiment in the fruit fly, Drosop
78 e in these seminatural settings with that in artificial selection experiments provides insight into h
79 the method to the breeder's equation in two artificial selection experiments, one using the wing of
81 equently purebred dogs have undergone strong artificial selection for a broad range of skeletal varia
83 Here, we investigate whether response to artificial selection for a key resistance mechanism, hyg
84 cal and behavioral traits because of intense artificial selection for appearance and function within
86 e time, some lineages of dogs have undergone artificial selection for behavioral phenotypes that migh
88 portion of the chromosome was maintained by artificial selection for blast resistance during crop br
89 f Drosophila melanogaster that had undergone artificial selection for both increased and decreased or
93 Drosophila sleep by relaxing bi-directional artificial selection for extreme sleep duration for 62 g
96 D. melanogaster is a correlated response to artificial selection for improved resistance against A.
97 that exhibited a direct response in males to artificial selection for increased ('high') and decrease
99 a set of traits that are the by-products of artificial selection for increased tolerance toward huma
100 drought tolerance in Brassica rapa and that artificial selection for increased WUE in drought will n
105 s are in response to natural selection or to artificial selection for production traits that have lef
107 methods XP-EHH, XP-CLR to identify traces of artificial selection for traits of economic importance.
108 However, cultivation practices and intense artificial selection for yield may entail a hidden cost:
112 ugh applied over extremely short timescales, artificial selection has dramatically altered the form,
115 Rather, our results suggest that recent artificial selection has targeted higher-order brain reg
117 between genotype and phenotype may apply to artificial selections, host-pathogen interactions, and o
120 were evolutionarily affected by natural and artificial selection in distinct phylogeographic clades,
125 s typically obtained for traits subjected to artificial selection in laboratory settings and up to se
126 titative trait locus regions under divergent artificial selection in metabolism and berry development
129 ng and flowering), demonstrating the role of artificial selection in shaping spinach phenotypic evolu
130 banded mongoose, a feature that may reflect artificial selection in the process of domestication for
131 ouse, obtained after decades of human-driven artificial selection, inbreeding, and adaptation to capt
132 We hypothesize that during domestication artificial selection increased the frequency of many del
134 ry history (via domestication and associated artificial selection) is associated with breed lifespan.
135 man-mediated changes through mutagenesis and artificial selection led to duplication of the penicilli
137 th locus (2-91.5), sm3, was discovered in an artificial selection line for low abdominal bristle numb
140 bility in domesticated soybean was caused by artificial selection of a point mutation in GmHs1-1.
141 x), i.e., high antennae size) conflicts with artificial selection of a trait (low Chl:C(max)) of most
142 y and variation in plastic morphologies, and artificial selection of manipulated lines drive multigen
143 selection, as opposed to the human-mediated artificial selection of Old World breeding programs.
145 ation regulator PRDM9 and subject to intense artificial selection, offer a unique system for dissecti
146 s involving crop species suggest that strong artificial selection often promotes splicing divergence,
147 g beetles (Nicrophorus vespilloides), we use artificial selection on a paternity assurance trait, and
148 on breeds-generated by thousands of years of artificial selection on a single species by human breede
150 e paralogs responded to a complex history of artificial selection on flowering time during the evolut
151 R data also supplied evidence that divergent artificial selection on flowering time may have played a
152 with a common population of tropical origin, artificial selection on flowering time was performed for
153 underlying these changes and the effects of artificial selection on genomic diversity are not well u
154 ional selection.(8) We imposed bidirectional artificial selection on male ornament (sex comb) size in
156 and compare the principal methods to impose artificial selection on microbiomes; discuss advantages
161 iotic dichlordiphenyltrichlorethan (DDT), by artificial selection or by transgenic expression of a ge
162 history trade-offs, we conclude that current artificial selection or gene manipulation experiments fo
165 f Solidago altissima plants originating from artificial selection plots in which we manipulated direc
167 A major underlying assumption has been that artificial selection pressures were substantially strong
169 for delineating the mechanistic basis of how artificial selection promotes rapid and pronounced pheno
170 itness landscape, which has implications for artificial selection protocols in biotechnology and argu
172 that organizes research around principles of artificial selection, quantitative genetics, and microbi
176 gether with genome-wide transcript analyses, artificial selection studies, and genome-wide analysis o
177 ll number of Asian introductions and not the artificial selection subsequently imposed by selective b
178 hat characterize DNA-protein interactions by artificial selection, such as SELEX,are often performed
182 etraploid showed a much stronger response to artificial selection than its diploid parents, while als
183 and provides a clearer view on the modes of artificial selection that drove soybean domestication an
185 dy may have been important during the strong artificial selection that occurs during domestication.
187 reen alga Dunaliella tertiolecta after using artificial selection to evolve a 9.3-fold difference in
190 straint hypothesis using five generations of artificial selection to reduce anther separation in wild
195 -capacity runners (HCR, n = 20) generated by artificial selection were assigned to either sedentary c
197 s article, we review the main limitations of artificial selection when applied to large and diverse c
199 oughout their development, with responses to artificial selection yielding insights into the action o