Fungal genetic systems ideally combine molecular tools for genome manipulation and a sexual reproduction system to create an informative assortment of combinations of genomic modifications. When employing the sexual cycle to generate multi-mutants, the background genotype variations in the parents may result in progeny phenotypic variation obscuring the effects of combined mutations. Here, to mitigate this variation in , we generated a strain that was near isogenic to the sequenced wild-type strain, FGSC7600.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalysis of publicly available whole-genome sequence data from the Human Pangenome Project and the 1000 Genomes Project has identified a DNA segment of approximately 60 kb in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) between HLA-W and HLA-J that is present in some MHC haplotypes but not others. This DNA segment is largely repeat element-rich but includes the pseudogene HLA-Y, thus pinpointing the location of this pseudogene, and a new HLA class I sequence we have called HLA-OLI. HLA-OLI clusters phylogenetically with the HLA class I pseudogenes, HLA-P and HLA-W, and appears to have a similar genetic structure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolyploidization has played a prominent role in the evolutionary history of plants. Two recent and sequential allopolyploidization events have resulted in the formation of wheat species with different ploidies, and which provide a model to study the effects of polyploidization on the evolution of gene expression. In this study, we identified differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between four BBAA tetraploid wheats of three different ploidy backgrounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFand produce carcinogenic aflatoxins during crop infection, with extensive variations in production among isolates, ranging from atoxigenic to highly toxigenic. Here, we report draft genome sequences of one isolate and nine isolates from field environments for use in comparative, functional, and phylogenetic studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEfforts in genome sequencing in the genus have led to the development of quality reference genomes for several important species including , , and However, less progress has been made for As part of the effort of the USDA-ARS Annual Aflatoxin Workshop Fungal Genome Project, the isolate NRRL3357 was sequenced and resulted in a scaffold-level genome released in 2005. Our goal has been biologically driven, focusing on two areas: isolate variation in aflatoxin production and drought stress exacerbating aflatoxin production by Therefore, we developed two reference pseudomolecule genome assemblies derived from chromosome arms for two isolates: AF13, a MAT1-2, highly stress tolerant, and highly aflatoxigenic isolate; and NRRL3357, a MAT1-1, less stress tolerant, and moderate aflatoxin producer in comparison to AF13. Here, we report these two reference-grade assemblies for these isolates through a combination of PacBio long-read sequencing and optical mapping, and coupled them with comparative, functional, and phylogenetic analyses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Cell Environ
September 2018
Soybean (Glycine max) and common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) share a polyploidy event ~59 MYA, followed by a Glycine-specific whole genome duplication (WGD) ~8-13 MYA. Duplicated genes were classified into five categories: singletons, dispersed, proximal, tandem, or WGD/segmental and found strong correlations between gene category and functional annotation. Photosynthesis and transcriptional regulation-related Gene Ontology terms were significantly over-represented in singletons and WGD genes, respectively, aligning with the gene balance hypothesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Single-stranded non-protein coding small RNAs, 18-25 nucleotides in length, are ubiquitous throughout plants genomes and are involved in post-transcriptional gene regulation. Several types of DNA markers have been reported for the detection of genetic diversity or sequence variation in soybean, one of the most important legume crops in worldwide for seed protein and oil content. Recently, with the available of public genomic databases, there has been a shift from the labor-intensive development of PCR-based markers to sequence-based genotyping and the development of functional markers within genes, often coupled with the use of RNA information.
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