About CIGENE

The Centre for Integrative Genetics (CIGENE) was formally established in 2003 at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences at campus Aas 30 km southeast of Oslo. It is a campus-wide undertaking with contributions from the Department of Animal and Aquacultural Sciences, Department of Plant and Environmental Sciences, Department of Mathematics and Technology, and Department of Chemistry, Food and Biotechnology. The UMB University Board voted in June 2010 to accord CIGENE the status of ”Strategic Research Centre” at Campus Ås.  

CIGENE aims to contribute to a deep causal understanding of complex genetic characters in fish, plants and animals for scientific and commercial exploitation based on a conceptual and methodological integration of nonlinear system dynamics, mathematical statistics, biological theory, biological physics, and genomic and phenotypic data.


Our Concept
The search for principles and methodologies that link the behaviours of molecules (i.e. genes) to system characteristics and functions (i.e. phenotypes) has been the prime occupation of genetics for the last 100 years. To pay due credit to the immense efforts and achievements of the genetics community and the fact that very much of modern interdisciplinary biological research addresses old disciplinary goals of genetics, while at the same time recognizing that genetics research is undergoing a dramatic transition conceptually, methodologically and technologically, we have coined the term integrative genetics. 



 

Salmonid biology conference, Oslo, June 2012

The 1st International Conference on Integrative Salmonid Biology (ICISB) will be held in Oslo, Norway, on June 17th – 20th, 2012. ICISB is intended to provide a forum to discuss recent developments and future plans for salmonid biology and genomics.

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Recent publications

Complex mixtures: A critical examination of a paper by Homer et al (2012) Egeland, T., Fonneløp, A.E., Berg, P.R., Kent, M., Lien, S., Forensic Sci Int Genet 6 (1), 64–9.
A dense SNP-based linkage map for Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) reveals extended chromosome homeologies and striking differences in sex-specific recombination patterns (2011) Lien, S., Gidskehaug, L., Moen, T., Hayes, B.J., Berg, P.R., Davidson, W.S., Omholt, S.W., Kent, M.P., BMC Genomics 12 (1), 615.
Genotype-phenotype map characteristics of an in silico heart cell (2011) Vik, J.O., Gjuvsland, A.B., Li, L., Tøndel, K., Niederer, S., Smith, N., Hunter, P.J., Omholt, S.W., Frontiers in Physiology 2, 106.
Modeling the Spatial Reach of the LFP (2011) Lindén, H., Tetzlaff, T., Potjans, T.C., Pettersen, K.H., Grün, S., Diesmann, M., Einevoll, G.T., Neuron 72 (5), 859–72.
Dynamics of actively regulated gene networks (2011) Ironi, L., Panzeri, L., Plahte, E., Simoncini, V., Physica D: Nonlinear Phenomena 240 (8), 779–794.
Inverse current source density method in two dimensions: inferring neural activation from multielectrode recordings (2011) Leski, S., Pettersen, K.H., Tunstall, B., Einevoll, G.T., Gigg, J., Wójcik, D.K., Neuroinformatics 9 (4), 401–25.

All CIGENE publications...
 

Research news: Major salmon project

CIGENE scientists at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB) are involved in a major research project to investigate the genetic impact that salmon escaped from fish farms can have on wild salmon.

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Research news: Tapping the brain orchestra

Researchers at the Norwegian University of Life Sciences (UMB) and CIGENE have developed a new method for detailed analyses of electrical activity in the brain.

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