Publications by authors named "Sreepriya Pramod"

Unlabelled: Recent suggestions for mandated lowering of nicotine content in cigarettes have prompted tobacco breeders to search for germplasm with allelic variability contributing to low alkaloid accumulation. In this research, we phenotyped a series of 81 selected diverse tobacco introductions (TIs) to identify a sub-group with authentic low alkaloid phenotypes. We also genotyped these materials for sequences associated with the and loci previously reported to influence tobacco alkaloid biosynthesis.

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Microsatellites are common in genomes of most eukaryotic species. Due to their high mutability, an adaptive role for microsatellites has been considered. However, little is known concerning the contribution of microsatellites towards phenotypic variation.

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The distribution of microsatellites in exons, and their association with gene ontology (GO) terms is explored to elucidate patterns of microsatellite evolution in the common sunflower, Helianthus annuus. The relative position, motif, size and level of impurity were estimated for each microsatellite in the unigene database available from the Compositae Genome Project (CGP), and statistical analyses were performed to determine if differences in microsatellite distributions and enrichment within certain GO terms were significant. There are more translated than untranslated microsatellites, implying that many bring about structural changes in proteins.

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Premise Of The Study: The "tuning knob" model of King et al. (Endeavor 21: 36-40, 1997) postulates that microsatellite mutations can alter phenotypes in a stepwise fashion. Some proposed mechanisms involve regulation of gene expression.

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Premise Of The Study: Research on the evolutionary role of exonic microsatellites currently lacks an understanding of the evolutionary pressures that promote or limit their expansion. Contrasting levels of variability and genetic structures at anonymous and transcribed microsatellite loci of varying lengths are likely to provide useful insights regarding the relative strength of selection acting on different classes of microsatellites. We have developed primers for long transcribed microsatellites in Helianthus annuus to make these comparisons.

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