Publications by authors named "Xinbin Dai"

The chloroplast is a critical battleground in the arms race between plants and pathogens. Among microbe-secreted mycotoxins, tenuazonic acid (TeA), produced by the genus Alternaria and other phytopathogenic fungi, inhibits photosynthesis, leading to a burst of photosynthetic singlet oxygen (O) that is implicated in damage and chloroplast-to-nucleus retrograde signaling. Despite the significant crop damage caused by Alternaria pathogens, our understanding of the molecular mechanism by which TeA promotes pathogenicity and cognate plant defense responses remains fragmentary.

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Switchgrass rust caused by () has the ability to significantly affect the biomass yield of switchgrass, an important biofuel crop in the United States. A comparative genome analysis of with rust pathogen genomes infecting monocot cereal crops wheat, barley, oats, maize and sorghum revealed the presence of larger structural variations contributing to their genome sizes. A comparative alignment of the rust pathogen genomes resulted in the identification of collinear and syntenic relationships between and ; 21-0 ( 21) and Ug99 ( Ug99) and between 21 and ().

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Genome-wide association study data analyses often face two significant challenges: (i) high dimensionality of single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotypes and (ii) imputation of missing values. SNPs are not independent due to physical linkage and natural selection. The correlation of nearby SNPs is known as linkage disequilibrium (LD), which can be used for LD conceptual SNP bin mapping, missing genotype inferencing and SNP dimension reduction.

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Legumes have contributed to human health, sustainable food and feed production worldwide for centuries. The study of model legumes has played vital roles in deciphering key genes, pathways, and networks regulating biological mechanisms and agronomic traits. Along with emerging breeding technology such as genome editing, translation of the knowledge gained from model plants to crops is in high demand.

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We report an advanced web server, the plant-specific small noncoding RNA interference tool , which can be used to design a pool of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) for highly effective, specific, and nontoxic gene silencing in plants. In developing this tool, we integrated the transcript dataset of plants, several rules governing gene silencing, and a series of computational models of the biological mechanism of the RNA interference (RNAi) pathway. The designed pool of siRNAs can be used to construct a long double-strand RNA and expressed through virus-induced gene silencing (VIGS) or synthetic transacting siRNA vectors for gene silencing.

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Myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) are a significant obstacle for immunotherapy of cancer. It is of great clinical relevance to study the mechanism of MDSCs accumulation in mouse spleens and establish a stable method to obtain high-purity MDSCs in vitro for further research. Here, we established a new method for amplifying a large number of highly pure MDSCs in vitro.

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Brachypodium distachyon is an annual C3 grass used as a monocot model system in functional genomics research. Insertional mutagenesis is a powerful tool for both forward and reverse genetics studies. In this study, we explored the possibility of using the tobacco retrotransposon Tnt1 to create a transposon-based insertion mutant population in B.

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Plants and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF) engage in mutually beneficial symbioses based on a reciprocal exchange of nutrients. The beneficial character of the symbiosis is maintained through a mechanism called autoregulation of mycorrhization (AOM). AOM includes root-to-shoot-to-root signaling; however, the molecular details of AOM are poorly understood.

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A growing number of small secreted peptides (SSPs) in plants are recognized as important regulatory molecules with roles in processes such as growth, development, reproduction, stress tolerance, and pathogen defense. Recent discoveries further implicate SSPs in regulating root nodule development, which is of particular significance for legumes. SSP-coding genes are frequently overlooked, because genome annotation pipelines generally ignore small open reading frames, which are those most likely to encode SSPs.

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Genome-wide association study (GWAS) is a powerful approach that has revolutionized the field of quantitative genetics. Two-dimensional GWAS that accounts for epistatic genetic effects needs to consider the effects of marker pairs, thus quadratic genetic variants, compared to one-dimensional GWAS that accounts for individual genetic variants. Calculating genome-wide kinship matrices in GWAS that account for relationships among individuals represented by ultra-high dimensional genetic variants is computationally challenging.

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Hundreds to thousands of small secreted peptides (SSPs) are encoded in plant genomes but have been overlooked, and most remain unannotated and unstudied. Despite their low profile, they have been found to confer dramatic effects on growth and development of plants. With the growing appreciation of their significance, the development of appropriate methods to identify and functionally assess the myriad SSPs encoded in plant genomes has become critical.

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is an important biotrophic fungal pathogen that causes rust disease in switchgrass. Lack of genomic resources for has hampered the progress toward developing effective disease resistance against this pathogen. Therefore, we have sequenced the whole genome of and generated a framework to understand pathogenicity mechanisms and identify effectors, repeat element invasion, genome evolution, and comparative genomics among spp.

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Phased small interfering RNAs (phasiRNAs) are a class of non-coding RNAs that perform essential functions in plants. Unlike microRNA biogenesis from a hairpin structure, the production of phasiRNAs usually requires a phase initiator and an RNA-dependent RNA polymerase (RDR) to form double-strand RNAs. By using full-length rice cDNA (KL-cDNA) to identify phasiRNA loci, we found that a putative non-coding sequence with a long hairpin structure generates the phasiRNAs, which we name Long Hairpin-structure containing non-coding RNA (LHR).

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Summary: We present GWASpro, a high-performance web server for the analyses of large-scale genome-wide association studies (GWAS). GWASpro was developed to provide data analyses for large-scale molecular genetic data, coupled with complex replicated experimental designs such as found in plant science investigations and to overcome the steep learning curves of existing GWAS software tools. GWASpro supports building complex design matrices, by which complex experimental designs that may include replications, treatments, locations and times, can be accounted for in the linear mixed model.

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The interactions among genes and between genes and environment contribute significantly to the phenotypic variation of complex traits and may be possible explanations for missing heritability. However, to our knowledge no existing tool can address the two kinds of interactions. Here we propose a novel linear mixed model that considers not only the additive effects of biological markers but also the interaction effects of marker pairs.

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Plant regulatory small RNAs (sRNAs), which include most microRNAs (miRNAs) and a subset of small interfering RNAs (siRNAs), such as the phased siRNAs (phasiRNAs), play important roles in regulating gene expression. Although generated from genetically distinct biogenesis pathways, these regulatory sRNAs share the same mechanisms for post-translational gene silencing and translational inhibition. psRNATarget was developed to identify plant sRNA targets by (i) analyzing complementary matching between the sRNA sequence and target mRNA sequence using a predefined scoring schema and (ii) by evaluating target site accessibility.

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Growing evidence indicates that small, secreted peptides (SSPs) play critical roles in legume growth and development, yet the annotation of SSP-coding genes is far from complete. Systematic reannotation of the genome identified 1,970 homologs of established SSP gene families and an additional 2,455 genes that are potentially novel SSPs, previously unreported in the literature. The expression patterns of known and putative SSP genes based on 144 RNA sequencing data sets covering various stages of macronutrient deficiencies and symbiotic interactions with rhizobia and mycorrhiza were investigated.

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The term epistasis refers to interactions between multiple genetic loci. Genetic epistasis is important in regulating biological function and is considered to explain part of the 'missing heritability,' which involves marginal genetic effects that cannot be accounted for in genome-wide association studies. Thus, the study of epistasis is of great interest to geneticists.

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The biological networks controlling plant signal transduction, metabolism and gene regulation are composed of not only tens of thousands of genes, compounds, proteins and RNAs but also the complicated interactions and co-ordination among them. These networks play critical roles in many fundamental mechanisms, such as plant growth, development and environmental response. Although much is known about these complex interactions, the knowledge and data are currently scattered throughout the published literature, publicly available high-throughput data sets and third-party databases.

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The LegumeIP 2.0 database hosts large-scale genomics and transcriptomics data and provides integrative bioinformatics tools for the study of gene function and evolution in legumes. Our recent updates in LegumeIP 2.

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Background: Alfalfa (Medicago sativa L.) is the primary forage legume crop species in the United States and plays essential economic and ecological roles in agricultural systems across the country. Modern alfalfa is the result of hybridization between tetraploid M.

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RNA interference (RNAi) is one of the most popular and effective molecular technologies for knocking down the expression of an individual gene of interest in living organisms. Yet the technology still faces the major issue of nonspecific gene silencing, which can compromise gene functional characterization and the interpretation of phenotypes associated with individual gene knockdown. Designing an effective and target-specific small interfering RNA (siRNA) for induction of RNAi is therefore the major challenge in RNAi-based gene silencing.

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Along with the canonical miRNA, distinct miRNA-like sequences called sibling miRNAs (sib-miRs) are generated from the same pre-miRNA. Among them, isomeric sequences featuring slight variations at the terminals, relative to the canonical miRNA, constitute a pool of isomeric sibling miRNAs (isomiRs). Despite the high prevalence of isomiRs in eukaryotes, their features and relevance remain elusive.

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Background: Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) is grown throughout the world and comprises roughly 50% of the grain legumes consumed worldwide. Despite this, genetic resources for common beans have been lacking. Next generation sequencing, has facilitated our investigation of the gene expression profiles associated with biologically important traits in common bean.

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