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Search: WFRF:(De Jong Adriaan)

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1.
  • In ’t Veld, Sjors G.J.G., et al. (author)
  • Detection and localization of early- and late-stage cancers using platelet RNA
  • 2022
  • In: Cancer Cell. - : Elsevier. - 1535-6108 .- 1878-3686. ; 40:9, s. 999-1009.e6
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Cancer patients benefit from early tumor detection since treatment outcomes are more favorable for less advanced cancers. Platelets are involved in cancer progression and are considered a promising biosource for cancer detection, as they alter their RNA content upon local and systemic cues. We show that tumor-educated platelet (TEP) RNA-based blood tests enable the detection of 18 cancer types. With 99% specificity in asymptomatic controls, thromboSeq correctly detected the presence of cancer in two-thirds of 1,096 blood samples from stage I–IV cancer patients and in half of 352 stage I–III tumors. Symptomatic controls, including inflammatory and cardiovascular diseases, and benign tumors had increased false-positive test results with an average specificity of 78%. Moreover, thromboSeq determined the tumor site of origin in five different tumor types correctly in over 80% of the cancer patients. These results highlight the potential properties of TEP-derived RNA panels to supplement current approaches for blood-based cancer screening.
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2.
  • Kanoni, Stavroula, et al. (author)
  • Implicating genes, pleiotropy, and sexual dimorphism at blood lipid loci through multi-ancestry meta-analysis.
  • 2022
  • In: Genome biology. - : Springer Science and Business Media LLC. - 1474-760X .- 1465-6906 .- 1474-7596. ; 23:1
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Genetic variants within nearly 1000 loci are known to contribute to modulation of blood lipid levels. However, the biological pathways underlying these associations are frequently unknown, limiting understanding of these findings and hindering downstream translational efforts such as drug target discovery.To expand our understanding of the underlying biological pathways and mechanisms controlling blood lipid levels, we leverage a large multi-ancestry meta-analysis (N=1,654,960) of blood lipids to prioritize putative causal genes for 2286 lipid associations using six gene prediction approaches. Using phenome-wide association (PheWAS) scans, we identify relationships of genetically predicted lipid levels to other diseases and conditions. We confirm known pleiotropic associations with cardiovascular phenotypes and determine novel associations, notably with cholelithiasis risk. We perform sex-stratified GWAS meta-analysis of lipid levels and show that 3-5% of autosomal lipid-associated loci demonstrate sex-biased effects. Finally, we report 21 novel lipid loci identified on the X chromosome. Many of the sex-biased autosomal and X chromosome lipid loci show pleiotropic associations with sex hormones, emphasizing the role of hormone regulation in lipid metabolism.Taken together, our findings provide insights into the biological mechanisms through which associated variants lead to altered lipid levels and potentially cardiovascular disease risk.
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3.
  • Schweinsberg, Martin, et al. (author)
  • Same data, different conclusions : Radical dispersion in empirical results when independent analysts operationalize and test the same hypothesis
  • 2021
  • In: Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes. - : Elsevier BV. - 0749-5978 .- 1095-9920. ; 165, s. 228-249
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In this crowdsourced initiative, independent analysts used the same dataset to test two hypotheses regarding the effects of scientists' gender and professional status on verbosity during group meetings. Not only the analytic approach but also the operationalizations of key variables were left unconstrained and up to individual analysts. For instance, analysts could choose to operationalize status as job title, institutional ranking, citation counts, or some combination. To maximize transparency regarding the process by which analytic choices are made, the analysts used a platform we developed called DataExplained to justify both preferred and rejected analytic paths in real time. Analyses lacking sufficient detail, reproducible code, or with statistical errors were excluded, resulting in 29 analyses in the final sample. Researchers reported radically different analyses and dispersed empirical outcomes, in a number of cases obtaining significant effects in opposite directions for the same research question. A Boba multiverse analysis demonstrates that decisions about how to operationalize variables explain variability in outcomes above and beyond statistical choices (e.g., covariates). Subjective researcher decisions play a critical role in driving the reported empirical results, underscoring the need for open data, systematic robustness checks, and transparency regarding both analytic paths taken and not taken. Implications for orga-nizations and leaders, whose decision making relies in part on scientific findings, consulting reports, and internal analyses by data scientists, are discussed.
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4.
  • Berg, Lotta, et al. (author)
  • Fåglarna i vår tjänst
  • 2020
  • In: Vår Fågelvärld. - 0042-2649. ; , s. 28-32
  • Journal article (pop. science, debate, etc.)
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5.
  • De Jong, Adriaan, et al. (author)
  • Birds of different feather flock together - genetic structure of Taiga Bean Goose in Central Scandinavia
  • 2019
  • In: Bird Conservation International. - 0959-2709 .- 1474-0001. ; 29, s. 249-262
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • During their flightless summer moult, Taiga Bean Geese Anser fabalis fabalis gather at communal moulting sites. Individuals from the Nord-TrOndelag breeding area in Norway have been observed to join with local individuals on moulting sites in Vilhelmina Municipality, Sweden. These two groups show distinct features in breeding habitat and migratory behaviour, but are they also genetically distinct? We used 12 microsatellite loci for genotyping 109 blood, feather and faecal samples from three sampling areas (ROyrvik in Norway and Stalon and Nastansjo in Sweden) to examine genetic diversity and structure. Clustering and Principal Coordinate analyses of all samples unveiled at least two distinct clusters, which were unevenly distributed over the sampling sites. Grouped by sampling sites, AMOVA and F-ST analyses showed that samples from the three sites differed genetically. These differences were larger between ROyrvik and Nastansjo than between Stalon and the other two. Relatedness was high among the ROyrvik samples. From our results we conclude that one of the clusters describes the ROyrvik breeding subpopulation, while the other(s) breed mainly in Sweden. Although these subpopulations simultaneously use the same moulting area in Vilhelmina, they appear to be ecologically, behaviourally and genetically distinct, in particular the ROyrvik sub-population. For goose conservation and management, we suggest that the Nord-TrOndelag (ROyrvik) subpopulation is considered a separate flyway management unit. Unravelling the Swedish sub-populations will need further study. For bird conservation is general, we suggest active genetic sampling for detailed population structure analyses and subsequent differentiated conservation and/or management schemes.
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9.
  • De Jong, Adriaan (author)
  • feedr and animalnexus.ca: A paired R package and user-friendly Web application for transforming and visualizing animal movement data from static stations
  • 2017
  • In: Ecology and Evolution. - : Wiley. - 2045-7758. ; 7, s. 7884-7896
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Radio frequency identification (RFID) provides a simple and inexpensive approach for examining the movements of tagged animals, which can provide information on species behavior and ecology, such as habitat/resource use and social interactions. In addition, tracking animal movements is appealing to naturalists, citizen scientists, and the general public and thus represents a tool for public engagement in science and science education. Although a useful tool, the large amount of data collected using RFID may quickly become overwhelming. Here, we present an R package (feedr) we have developed for loading, transforming, and visualizing time-stamped, georeferenced data, such as RFID data collected from static logger stations. Using our package, data can be transformed from raw RFID data to visits, presence (regular detections by a logger over time), movements between loggers, displacements, and activity patterns. In addition, we provide several conversion functions to allow users to format data for use in functions from other complementary R packages. Data can also be visualized through static or interactive maps or as animations over time. To increase accessibility, data can be transformed and visualized either through R directly, or through the companion site:http://animalnexus.ca, an online, user-friendly, R-based Shiny Web application. This system can be used by professional and citizen scientists alike to view and study animal movements. We have designed this package to be flexible and to be able to handle data collected from other stationary sources (e.g., hair traps, static very high frequency (VHF) telemetry loggers, observations of marked individuals in colonies or staging sites), and we hope this framework will become a meeting point for science, education, and community awareness of the movements of animals. We aim to inspire citizen engagement while simultaneously enabling robust scientific analysis.
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10.
  • De Jong, Adriaan (author)
  • Flyway population delineation in Taiga Bean Geese Anser fabalis fabalis revealed by multi-element feather stable isotope analysis
  • 2017
  • In: Ibis. - : Wiley. - 0019-1019 .- 1474-919X. ; 159, s. 66-75
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Fundamental to effective management of migratory waterbird populations is an understanding of their flyway delineation. Taiga Bean Geese Anser fabalis fabalis wintering in NW Denmark, Scotland and England are considered to originate from northern and central Sweden, southern and central Norway ('Western flyway'), those wintering in southern Sweden, NE and southern Denmark are considered to originate from northern Fennoscandia and western Russia ('Central flyway'), and those wintering in eastern Germany and Poland (which show far less favourable conservation status) are thought to come from western Siberia ('Eastern 1 flyway'), although evidence to demonstrate this has largely been lacking. Evidence for different natal and moult origins of Taiga Bean Geese was investigated using stable isotope analyses of feathers of four elements (delta H-2, delta C-13, delta N-15 and delta S-34). There were significant differences in isotopic composition of feathers from Swedish (Central) and German (Eastern 1) wintering populations and those moulting in Sweden in late summer (Western), which validated the three proposed major management flyway units above. The strong continental gradient in the stable hydrogen isotope ratios in precipitation (delta H-2(p)) across the region was used to assign wintering birds geospatially to natal and moulting origin, indicating separate natal and moulting areas for German (n = 37, from western Siberia) and Swedish (n = 20, Fennoscandia and more western Russia) wintering birds. These results confirm the largely discrete nature of these three flyways and contribute significantly to our ability to deliver effective targeted and appropriate research, monitoring and management actions throughout the ranges of these flyways.
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  • Result 1-10 of 85
Type of publication
reports (47)
journal article (33)
other publication (2)
conference paper (1)
doctoral thesis (1)
licentiate thesis (1)
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Type of content
other academic/artistic (50)
pop. science, debate, etc. (19)
peer-reviewed (16)
Author/Editor
Griffioen, Arjan W. (1)
Zhou, Wei (1)
Liu, Yang (1)
Nabika, Toru (1)
März, Winfried (1)
Nethander, Maria, 19 ... (1)
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Lyssenko, V. (1)
Orozco, Lorena (1)
Salomaa, Veikko (1)
Wang, Zhe (1)
De Borst, Gert J (1)
Verdonck-de Leeuw, I ... (1)
Olafsson, Isleifur (1)
Lind, Lars (1)
Raitakari, Olli T (1)
Nilsonne, Gustav (1)
van den Akker, Olmo ... (1)
Schweinsberg, Martin (1)
Silberzahn, Raphael (1)
Uhlmann, Eric Luis (1)
van Heel, David A (1)
Loeffler, Markus (1)
Sattar, Naveed (1)
Campbell, Harry (1)
Ohlsson, Claes, 1965 (1)
Strachan, David P (1)
Deloukas, Panos (1)
Jonas, Jost B. (1)
Nilsson, Jan (1)
Schulze, Matthias B. (1)
North, Kari E. (1)
Natarajan, Pradeep (1)
Franks, Paul W. (1)
Meidtner, Karina (1)
Wareham, Nicholas J. (1)
Shu, Xiao-Ou (1)
Zheng, Wei (1)
Kraft, Peter (1)
Nilsson, Leif (1)
Kuusisto, Johanna (1)
Laakso, Markku (1)
McCarthy, Mark I (1)
Bork-Jensen, Jette (1)
Brandslund, Ivan (1)
Linneberg, Allan (1)
Grarup, Niels (1)
Pedersen, Oluf (1)
Hansen, Torben (1)
Ridker, Paul M. (1)
Chasman, Daniel I. (1)
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University
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (81)
Lund University (2)
Karolinska Institutet (2)
University of Gothenburg (1)
Umeå University (1)
Royal Institute of Technology (1)
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Uppsala University (1)
Stockholm University (1)
Linköping University (1)
Stockholm School of Economics (1)
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Language
Swedish (60)
English (23)
German (1)
Norwegian (1)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (81)
Agricultural Sciences (58)
Engineering and Technology (34)
Medical and Health Sciences (2)
Social Sciences (2)

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