Progeny plants were scored for pigmentation phenotype and analyzed for genotype using SSR markers. |
|
Other changes include a laxity of the joints, which ultimately may assist labour and birth, and increased brown pigmentation of the skin. |
|
The gene produces this pigmentation when the fall days are sunny bright, but not hot, and the nights are cloudless and cool. |
|
Prior clinical reports have suggested that exogenously administered alpha or beta melanocyte-stimulating hormone can increase skin pigmentation. |
|
This is characterized by the appearance of wrinkles, dry, inelastic leathery skin and irregular pigmentation. |
|
The dural covering of the spinal cord also showed pigmentation adjacent to intervertebral disk. |
|
He inhaled with short, deep breathes, and the pigmentation of his skin lightened up to its previous color. |
|
Previous studies in multiple plant species have shown an association of both pigmentation and hairiness with cool temperatures. |
|
The transcutaneous jaundice meter is affected by factors such as gestational age, birth weight, and skin pigmentation. |
|
The natural extension of his work on the genetics of pigmentation led him into a study of piebald mice, this turned out to be a quagmire. |
|
Chronic thickening, dryness, and pigmentation of her skin had developed in areas exposed to the sun. |
|
They include skin and mucosal pigmentation, postural hypotension, weight loss, and hyperkalaemia. |
|
Topical steroid products Contact eczema, bacterial and fungal infections, Cushing's syndrome, acne, skin atrophy and pigmentation disorders. |
|
In mice, as in many other mammals, the wild-type pigmentation pattern of the fur is called agouti. |
|
For those who want to go on and argue this I will refer you to lack of skin pigmentation in albinos. |
|
For instance, plants grew leaves with new shapes, had different pigmentation, or hairy roots. |
|
The disease should be diagnosed before skin pigmentation, liver enlargement, diabetes, heart failure, or aching joints develop. |
|
We are currently investigating the influence of circulating hormone levels on carotenoid transport and bill pigmentation in this species. |
|
Arnold noted that, curiously, many species of parrots that live in rain forests have not evolved fluorescent pigmentation. |
|
The open circles indicate variation of pigmentation inside the phenotypic class. |
|
|
The unique wing is a three-dimensional impression with brown-colored veins and pigmentation. |
|
In a number of bird studies, carotenoid pigmentation has been more or less conclusively shown to be a cue for female choice of males. |
|
Pigment accumulated throughout the shaft of the silks and was not limited to the silk hairs as is typical of anthocyanin pigmentation. |
|
The resulting kernel pigmentation phenotype consists of colorless pericarp with red sectors. |
|
We did not see a hair phenotype, but a subtle hair pigmentation phenotype would be difficult to see. |
|
Some modifiers have been reported to enhance anthocyanin pigmentation of vegetative parts in plants carrying specific r1 haplotypes. |
|
The plant and seed pigmentation components can be lost independently by mutation or unequal crossing over, leading to different derivatives. |
|
Increased pigmentation in animals, such as these spots, may be genetic, acquired, or associated with pigmented tumors. |
|
Black sponges are unaffected by solar UV, due to photoprotective pigmentation. |
|
The colour itself is anthocyanin, basically the same pigmentation as people can see in the autumn. |
|
After a prolonged period of dark growth, light irradiation does not elicit pigmentation. |
|
However there are ways, other than chemical pigmentation, in which organisms can produce color. |
|
Fully developed ascospores within intact asci could be identified by their red pigmentation. |
|
The zebra's coat alternates in contrasting areas of light and dark pigmentation. |
|
Patients exhibit subnormal eye and skin pigmentation due to aberrant melanosome development. |
|
We think that two risk factors may be the amount of pigmentation naturally occurring in the eye, and dietary elements. |
|
Ocular side effects include conjunctival hyperaemia, iris pigmentation, anterior uveitis, and cystoid macular oedema in patients who have had surgery for cataract. |
|
Prurigo pigmentosa is characterized by an inflammatory phase with pruritic erythematous papules and a resolution phase with reticulated pigmentation. |
|
Layer on a skin lightener if you have freckles or dark pigmentation. |
|
The photoinduced side effects of all these drugs were, in particular, changes in the skin pigmentation, corneal opacity, cataract formation and retinopathy. |
|
|
We speculated that pigmentation of the meibomian glands in this patient was due to obstructive dysfunction of the meibomian glands as well as to the use of liquid eyeliner. |
|
Excessive pigmentation can be caused by oversecretion of adrenocorticotrophic hormones and an associated melanocyte-stimulating hormone from the pituitary gland. |
|
If one species with slightly different amounts of skin pigmentation couldn't live together, how could two species as different as two poles of a magnet cope? |
|
The mutant also has severely reduced growth rates and a distinctive purple leaf colour as a result of increased anthocyanin pigmentation, particularly when grown in soil. |
|
In these models, formation of a linear ornament requires pigmentation or ribbing to be connected with previously existing pigment or ribs on the shell margin. |
|
The loricas of these Trachelomonas cells collected from a small, freshwater pond exhibit the characteristic orange pigmentation often seen in the genus. |
|
This results in a life long slate-grey pigmentation of the tissues. |
|
Differences in pigmentation and scalation were the bases for these opinions. |
|
Effects of coccidial and mycoplasmal infections on carotenoid-based plumage pigmentation in male house finches. |
|
Thyroid and the annual gonad development body weight, pigmentation and bill color cycles of lal munia Estrila amandava. |
|
A Those with dark skin often find that pigmentation is more noticeable on their complexion. |
|
Electron micrographs revealed that these Yeren hairs also exhibit an unusual structure and pigmentation. |
|
Potatoes have been bioengineered specifically for these pigmentation traits. |
|
At this stage, they are called yellow eels because of their golden pigmentation. |
|
There are dermatological problems such as striae atrophica, colloid milium ochronosis, scabies, cutaneous atrophy and pitch black pigmentation. |
|
Over the following days, the child developed mottled skin pigmentation and diffused purpuric rashes. |
|
Ochronosis is a rare metabolic disorder that is characterized by a brownish-black pigmentation of connective tissues. |
|
Myroides odoratum and odoratimimus are gram-negative, nonmotile, obligate aerobic bacilli with yellow pigmentation and a distinct fruity odor. |
|
Regulatory enzymes such as tyrosinase and tyrosinase-related proteins are known to regulate skin pigmentation. |
|
Use of lycopene, an antioxidant carotinoid, in laying hens for egg yolk pigmentation. |
|
|
Canthaxanthin is still the color of choice for providing a red tone in egg yolks and in the pigmentation of salmonid fishes and shrimp. |
|
Retinoids, such as tretinoin, tazarotene, and adapalene, reduce pigmentation by normalizing the activation of the melanocytes in the skin. |
|
In stage 1 there is stomatitis, erythematous mucosa, vesicles, mucosal ulcers, melanotic mucosal pigmentation and mucosal petechiae. |
|
There may be an orange pigmentation overlying the melanotic lesion, and an area of retinal detachment, usually inferiorly. |
|
This pigmentation in the tracheobronchial mucosa is surrounded by calcified or noncalcified lymph nodes. |
|
Waardenburg syndrome is an inherited disorder often characterized by varying degrees of hearing loss and changes in skin and hair pigmentation. |
|
This will cover dark circles and blemishes, such as brown pigmentation or liver spots. |
|
It lightens UV-induced skin pigmentation and works by accelerating proteolytic degradation of tyrosinase. |
|
Aortotomy revealed typical ochronotic pigmentation of a severely calcified aortic valve and aortic intima. |
|
Gluten is also linked to pigmentation, so age spots and uneven skin tone are another unfortunate side-effect. |
|
In present study the most type of pigmentation in lymph nodes was of Anthracosis and hemosiderosis. |
|
Xanthochromistic pigmentation is not unique to raccoons of St. Catherines Island. |
|
Skin pigmentation as a predictor of minimal phototoxic dose after oral methoxsalen. |
|
Orally administered Polypodium leucotomos extract decreases psoralen-UVA-induced phototoxicity, pigmentation, and damage of human skin. |
|
Some flatfishes are also able to change their pigmentation to match the background, in a manner similar to some cephalopods. |
|
Differences may also be found in phyllotaxy, intemode length, anthocyanin pigmentation, rooting ability, or wood structure. |
|
The term glass eel refers to all developmental stages between the end of metamorphosis and full pigmentation. |
|
The melanic pigmentation process occurs when the young eels are in coastal waters. |
|
Light skin pigmentation protects against depletion of vitamin D, which requires sunlight to make. |
|
We are getting products for pigmentation, melasma, alopecia and complete range of products for solar protection-cum-damage repair. |
|
|
We specialise in treatments for redness, rosacea, pigmentation, melasma acne, pores, scarring, lines and wrinkles, loose skin. |
|
Anthracotic pigmentation in the bronchial mucosa is a bronchoscopic finding of pneumoconiosis, or evidence of heavy atmospheric soot. |
|
Mesothorax and metathorax with light diffuse pigmentation in the center and darker shading on the perimeter. |
|
They thought Negroid pigmentation arose because of the heat of the tropical sun. |
|
Among the possible causes of black thyroid are minocycline-induced pigmentation, hemochromatosis, ochronosis, mucoviscidosis, ceroid storage disease, bruising, and hemorrhage. |
|
Its fiery stripes resemble the defective pigmentation of someone's skin, but you still feel invited by the rondure of the apple to stroke it, to clasp it. |
|
This helped identify genes required for vision and pigmentation. |
|
Anthocyanins mainly responsible for red or blue pigmentation in potato cultivars do not have nutritional significance, but are used for color variety and consumer appeal. |
|
A chemical peel works by applying caustic chemicals to the skin in order to even out pigmentation, reduce scarring and smooth out lines and wrinkles. |
|
Theses for gradual loss of pigmentation include attenuation of enzymes involved in melanogenesis, impaired DNA repair, loss of telomerase, and antioxidant mechanisms. |
|
It's the combination of yellow, red and blue pigmentation called pheomelanin and black to brown pigmentation called eumelanin that gives mammals and birds their skin color. |
|
It may hence be assumed that this apparently capillary pigmentation should be ascribed merely to an accumulation of pigment-molecules towards one side of the hepatic cells. |
|
It's almost an eyelift without the painful surgery as it dramatically reduces fine lines and puffiness as well as helping erase pigmentation and dark circles. |
|