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Mahdi Mokhber

Researcher at Urmia University

Publications -  10
Citations -  119

Mahdi Mokhber is an academic researcher from Urmia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Domestication & Genome. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 7 publications receiving 79 citations.

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New Insights on Water Buffalo Genomic Diversity and Post-Domestication Migration Routes From Medium Density SNP Chip Data

Licia Colli, +52 more
TL;DR: The data suggest that the current distribution of water buffalo diversity has been shaped by the combined effects of multiple migration events occurred at different stages of the post-domestication history of the species.
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A genome-wide scan for signatures of selection in Azeri and Khuzestani buffalo breeds.

TL;DR: Candidate genes identified in regions potentially under selection were associated with physiological pathways including milk production, cytoskeleton organization, growth, metabolic function, apoptosis and domestication-related changes include immune and nervous system development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Study of whole genome linkage disequilibrium patterns of Iranian water buffalo breeds using the Axiom Buffalo Genotyping 90K Array.

TL;DR: A density of 90K SNP is sufficient for genomic analyses relying on long range LD (e.g. GWAS and genomic selection) and the estimated effective population sizes indicate that the MAZ is at risk and requires careful management.
Journal ArticleDOI

A genome-wide scan of copy number variants in three Iranian indigenous river buffaloes.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors performed a genome wide CNV scan in 361 buffaloes of the three Iranian river breeds (Azeri, Khuzestani and Mazandarani) through the analysis of data obtained using the Axiom® Buffalo Genotyping Array 90 K.

Genome-wide association study for milk production in iranian buffalo

Mahdi Mokhber
TL;DR: A genome wide association study was conducted to identify regions of the genome associated with milk production trait in Iranian water buffaloes, and the most important gene was SCOS2 gene on chromosome BTA5.