Publications by authors named "Reeve W"

Repeats can mediate rearrangements and recombination in plant mitochondrial genomes and plastid genomes. While repeat accumulations are linked to heightened evolutionary rates and complex structures in specific lineages, debates persist regarding the extent of their influence on sequence and structural evolution. In this study, 75 Plantago plastomes were analyzed to investigate the relationships between repeats, nucleotide substitution rates, and structural variations.

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sp. PL1-032A was isolated from Pearse Lakes, Western Australia. The sequenced genome consists of a single chromosome (2,705,688  bp) with a GC content of 47.

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sp. PL1-037 was isolated from Pearse Lakes, Rottnest Island, Western Australia. The sequenced completed genome for PL1-037 is composed of a single chromosome (2,804,934  bp) with a GC content of 47.

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sp. PL1-022 was isolated from Pearse Lakes, Western Australia. The sequenced genome consists of a chromosome (3,140,198 bp; 48.

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Carnation () is one of the most valuable commercial flowers, due to its richness of color and form, and its excellent storage and vase life. The diverse demands of the market require faster breeding in carnations. A full understanding of carnations is therefore required to guide the direction of breeding.

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is a perennial ornamental shrub that is highly regarded in ornamental horticulture around the world. However, the absence of genome data limits our understanding of the pathways involved in bract coloration and breeding. Here, we report a chromosome-level assembly of the giga-genome of 'Mrs Butt', a cultivar thought to be the origin of many other cultivars.

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Background And Aims: Inoculation of legumes with effective N-fixing rhizobia is a common practice to improve farming profitability and sustainability. To succeed, inoculant rhizobia must overcome competition for nodulation by resident soil rhizobia that fix N ineffectively. In Kenya, where (common bean) is inoculated with highly effective CIAT899 from Colombia, response to inoculation is low, possibly due to competition from ineffective resident soil rhizobia.

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Integrated virus genomes (prophages) are commonly found in sequenced bacterial genomes but have rarely been described in detail for rhizobial genomes. STM 6018 is a rhizobial strain that was isolated in 2006 from a root nodule of a host in French Guiana, South America. Here we describe features of the genome of STM 6018, focusing on the characterization of two different types of prophages that have been identified in its genome.

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Pseudomonas syringae MUP17 was isolated from Western Australian frost-damaged barley. The MUP17 complete genome contained a 5,850,185-bp single circular chromosome with a GC content of 59.12%.

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The genome of Pseudomonas syringae MUP32, which was isolated from frost-damaged pea in New South Wales, Australia, is tripartite and contains a circular chromosome (6,032,644 bp) and two plasmids (61,675 and 54,993 bp). IMG/M genome annotation identified 5,370 protein-coding genes, one of which encoded an ice-nucleation protein with 19 repetitive PF00818 domains.

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Pseudomonas syringae MUP20 was isolated from Western Australian frost-damaged wheat. The MUP20 complete genome contained a 6,045,198-bp single circular chromosome with a GC content of 59.03%.

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The genus (Moraceae) is comprised of three non-hybrid recognized species that all produce high quality fiber essential in the development of papermaking and barkcloth-making technology. In addition, these species also have medicinal value in several countries. Despite their important economical, medicinal, and ecological values, the complete mitogenome of has not been reported and investigated, which would greatly facilitate molecular phylogenetics, species identification and understanding evolutionary processes.

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Although forms highly effective symbioses with the comparatively acid-sensitive genus , its introduction into acid soils appears to have selected for symbiotic interactions with acid-tolerant strains. has the unusual ability of being able to nodulate and fix nitrogen, albeit sub-optimally, not only with but also with the promiscuous host . Here we describe the genome of OR191 and genomic features important for the symbiotic interaction with both of these hosts.

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The Ghost bat is a monotypic bat species that is endemic to northern Australia and named on the basis of the large size of its partially conjoined ears. It is the only carnivorous bat found in Australia and its conservation status is currently listed as Vulnerable. Here, we describe the complete mitochondrial genome of and compare it to other vertebrates.

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The Common Rock Rat is an abundant small- to medium-sized Murid rodent that is endemic to Australia. It is a nocturnal mammal with a mostly herbivorous diet. This species is native to the wet/dry tropics of Northern Australia and can be identified from other rock rats on the basis of its small size and its tail length (which is at least equivalent to its head-body length).

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In this announcement, we report the complete mitogenome of the vulnerable Crest-tailed Mulgara () (Krefft, 1867). The mitogenome was 17,085 bp in length and contained 13 protein-coding genes, two rRNA genes, 22 tRNAs and a 1583 bp variable control region (D-loop). The features of the mitogenome are consistent with other vertebrate mitogenomes but, in contrast to other marsupials, appears to contain a functional tRNA-Lysine with a UUU anticodon.

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symbiovar strains TA1 and CC275e are nitrogen-fixing microsymbionts of spp. and have been used as commercial inoculant strains for clovers in pastoral agriculture in Australia and New Zealand. Here we present the complete genome sequences of both strains, resolving their multipartite genome structures and allowing for future studies using genomic approaches.

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Background: Cupriavidus strain STM 6070 was isolated from nickel-rich soil collected near Koniambo massif, New Caledonia, using the invasive legume trap host Mimosa pudica. STM 6070 is a heavy metal-tolerant strain that is highly effective at fixing nitrogen with M. pudica.

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10.1601/nm.1335 Mlalz-1 (INSDC = ATZD00000000) is an aerobic, motile, Gram-negative, non-spore-forming rod that was isolated from an effective nitrogen-fixing nodule of (L.

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Repair of uracils in DNA is initiated by uracil DNA glycosylases (UDGs). Family 1 UDGs (Ung) are the most efficient and ubiquitous proteins having an exquisite specificity for uracils in DNA. Ung are characterized by motifs A (GQDPY) and B (HPSPLS) sequences.

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USDA 76 (INSCD = ARAG00000000), the type strain for , is an aerobic, motile, Gram-negative, non-spore-forming rod that was isolated from an effective nitrogen-fixing root nodule of (L. Merr) grown in the USA. Because of its significance as a microsymbiont of this economically important legume, USDA 76 was selected as part of the DOE Joint Genome Institute 2010 sequencing project.

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STM6155 (INSCD = ATYY01000000) is an aerobic, motile, Gram-negative, non-spore-forming rod that can exist as a soil saprophyte or as an effective nitrogen fixing microsymbiont of the legume L.. STM6155 was isolated in 2009 from a nodule of the trap host grown in nickel-rich soil collected near Mont Dore, New Caledonia.

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Most Ensifer strains are comparatively acid sensitive, compromising their persistence in low pH soils. In the acid-tolerant strain Ensifer medicae WSM419, the acid-activated expression of lpiA is essential for enhancing survival in lethal acidic conditions. Here we characterise a multi-step phosphorelay signal transduction pathway consisting of TcsA, TcrA, FsrR, RpoN and its cognate enhancer-binding protein EbpA, which is required for the induction of lpiA and the downstream acvB gene.

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Ensifer sp. PC2 is an aerobic, motile, Gram-negative, non-spore-forming rod that was isolated from a nitrogen-fixing nodule of the tree legume P. cineraria (L.

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