Mingli Wu
Northwest A&F University
5 Papers
12 Citations
Mingli Wu is an academic researcher from Northwest A&F University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Gene & Indel. The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 5 publications.
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Papers
Transcriptome Characterization of Short Distance Transport Stress in Beef Cattle Blood.
Haidong Zhao,Xiaoqin Tang,Mingli Wu,Qi Li,Xiaohua Yi,Shirong Liu,Jiang Junyi,Shuhui Wang,Xiuzhu Sun +8 more
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper investigated the effect of short distance transportation by measuring the hematological indices and transcriptomic analysis, and they found that a stress-related marker "white blood cell count (WBC)" increased significantly after transportation.
Identification of a novel 24 bp insertion–deletion (indel) of the androgen receptor gene and its association with growth traits in four indigenous cattle breeds
TL;DR: A novel 24 bp indel within the AR gene significantly affected growth traits, suggesting that this indel may be a useful DNA marker for the elimination or selection of excellent individuals for cattle breeding.
Function of Chick Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue During the Embryonic and Posthatch Period
Haidong Zhao,Mingli Wu,Xiaoqin Tang,Qi Li,Xiaohua Yi,Shuhui Wang,Cunling Jia,Zehui Wei,Xiuzhu Sun +8 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the developmental changes of adipocyte differentiation, lipid synthesis, lipolysis, fatty acid β-oxidation, and lipid contents from E12 to D9.5.
Detection of genetic variation and activity analysis of the promoter region of the cattle tRNA-modified gene TRDMT1.
TL;DR: In this paper, a G > C mutation in the −1223 ǫbp position upstream of the TRDMT1 translation initiator codon was found, which may provide potential natural molecular materials for the study of tRNA modification.
Exploring insertions and deletions (indels) of MSRB3 gene and their association with growth traits in four Chinese indigenous cattle breeds
Mingli Wu,Shipeng Li,Guoliang Zhang,Yingzhi Fan,Yuan Gao,Yongzhen Huang,Xianyong Lan,Chuzhao Lei,Yun Ma,Yun Ma,Ruihua Dang +10 more
TL;DR: The results demonstrated that the polymorphisms in bovine MSRB3 gene were significantly associated with growth traits, which could be candidate loci for marker-assisted selection (MAS) in cattle breeding.