C. M. Frampton
University of Otago
4 Papers
11 Citations
C. M. Frampton is an academic researcher from University of Otago. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genetic marker & Wool. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Polymorphisms in the ovine myostatin gene (MSTN) and their association with growth and carcass traits in New Zealand Romney sheep
TL;DR: The results suggest that variation in ovine MSTN is associated with meat production, but not birth weight or growth rate in New Zealand Romney sheep.
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Polymorphism of the ovine β3‐adrenergic receptor gene (ADRB3) and its association with wool mean staple strength and yield
Rachel Forrest,T. O. Itenge-Mweza,Grant W McKenzie,Huitong Zhou,C. M. Frampton,Jonathan G. H. Hickford +5 more
TL;DR: The results from mixed-effects models and half-sib analyses suggest that ADRB3 alleles A and D have a negative impact on some wool traits, whereas ADRB 3 alleles C and E appear to have a positive impact, with allele C potentially having a greater impact than allele E on MSS.
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Improving the quality of wool through the use of gene markers
TL;DR: It appears as though genes coding for the KRTs and KAPs have the potential to impact on wool quality and could potentially be exploited in gene marker-assisted selection programmes in the wool industry for the rapid conversion of wool from one type to another.
Ovine FABP4 Variation and Its Association With Flystrike Susceptibility.
TL;DR: In this article, the A1 variant of FABP4 was found to be less likely (odds ratio 0.689, P = 0.014) to have flystrike than those without A1.