Literature DB >> 16865332

Single-copy genes define a conserved order between rice and wheat for understanding differences caused by duplication, deletion, and transposition of genes.

Nagendra K Singh1, Vivek Dalal, Kamlesh Batra, Binay K Singh, G Chitra, Archana Singh, Irfan A Ghazi, Mahavir Yadav, Awadhesh Pandit, Rekha Dixit, Pradeep K Singh, Harvinder Singh, Kirpa R Koundal, Kishor Gaikwad, Trilochan Mohapatra, Tilak R Sharma.   

Abstract

The high-quality rice genome sequence is serving as a reference for comparative genome analysis in crop plants, especially cereals. However, early comparisons with bread wheat showed complex patterns of conserved synteny (gene content) and colinearity (gene order). Here, we show the presence of ancient duplicated segments in the progenitor of wheat, which were first identified in the rice genome. We also show that single-copy (SC) rice genes, those representing unique matches with wheat expressed sequence tag (EST) unigene contigs in the whole rice genome, show more than twice the proportion of genes mapping to syntenic wheat chromosome as compared to the multicopy (MC) or duplicated rice genes. While 58.7% of the 1,244 mapped SC rice genes were located in single syntenic wheat chromosome groups, the remaining 41.3% were distributed randomly to the other six non-syntenic wheat groups. This could only be explained by a background dispersal of genes in the genome through transposition or other unknown mechanism. The breakdown of rice-wheat synteny due to such transpositions was much greater near the wheat centromeres. Furthermore, the SC rice genes revealed a conserved primordial gene order that gives clues to the origin of rice and wheat chromosomes from a common ancestor through polyploidy, aneuploidy, centromeric fusions, and translocations. Apart from the bin-mapped wheat EST contigs, we also compared 56,298 predicted rice genes with 39,813 wheat EST contigs assembled from 409,765 EST sequences and identified 7,241 SC rice gene homologs of wheat. Based on the conserved colinearity of 1,063 mapped SC rice genes across the bins of individual wheat chromosomes, we predicted the wheat bin location of 6,178 unmapped SC rice gene homologs and validated the location of 213 of these in the telomeric bins of 21 wheat chromosomes with 35.4% initial success. This opens up the possibility of directed mapping of a large number of conserved SC rice gene homologs in wheat. Overall, only 46.4% of these SC genes code for proteins with known functional domains; the remaining 53.6% have unknown function, and hence, represent an important, but yet, under explored category of genes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16865332     DOI: 10.1007/s10142-006-0033-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Funct Integr Genomics        ISSN: 1438-793X            Impact factor:   3.410


  48 in total

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Authors:  Huangjun Lu; Justin D Faris
Journal:  Funct Integr Genomics       Date:  2005-12-22       Impact factor: 3.410

2.  Rapid genome change in synthetic polyploids of Brassica and its implications for polyploid evolution.

Authors:  K Song; P Lu; K Tang; T C Osborn
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1995-08-15       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  The frequency distribution of gene family sizes in complete genomes.

Authors:  M A Huynen; E van Nimwegen
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  1998-05       Impact factor: 16.240

4.  Restriction of ectopic recombination by interhomolog interactions during Saccharomyces cerevisiae meiosis.

Authors:  A S Goldman; M Lichten
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2000-08-15       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  A draft sequence of the rice genome (Oryza sativa L. ssp. japonica).

Authors:  Stephen A Goff; Darrell Ricke; Tien-Hung Lan; Gernot Presting; Ronglin Wang; Molly Dunn; Jane Glazebrook; Allen Sessions; Paul Oeller; Hemant Varma; David Hadley; Don Hutchison; Chris Martin; Fumiaki Katagiri; B Markus Lange; Todd Moughamer; Yu Xia; Paul Budworth; Jingping Zhong; Trini Miguel; Uta Paszkowski; Shiping Zhang; Michelle Colbert; Wei-lin Sun; Lili Chen; Bret Cooper; Sylvia Park; Todd Charles Wood; Long Mao; Peter Quail; Rod Wing; Ralph Dean; Yeisoo Yu; Andrey Zharkikh; Richard Shen; Sudhir Sahasrabudhe; Alun Thomas; Rob Cannings; Alexander Gutin; Dmitry Pruss; Julia Reid; Sean Tavtigian; Jeff Mitchell; Glenn Eldredge; Terri Scholl; Rose Mary Miller; Satish Bhatnagar; Nils Adey; Todd Rubano; Nadeem Tusneem; Rosann Robinson; Jane Feldhaus; Teresita Macalma; Arnold Oliphant; Steven Briggs
Journal:  Science       Date:  2002-04-05       Impact factor: 47.728

6.  A workshop report on wheat genome sequencing: International Genome Research on Wheat Consortium.

Authors:  Bikram S Gill; Rudi Appels; Anna-Maria Botha-Oberholster; C Robin Buell; Jeffrey L Bennetzen; Boulos Chalhoub; Forrest Chumley; Jan Dvorák; Masaru Iwanaga; Beat Keller; Wanlong Li; W Richard McCombie; Yasunari Ogihara; Francis Quetier; Takuji Sasaki
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  2004-10       Impact factor: 4.562

7.  The Ashbya gossypii genome as a tool for mapping the ancient Saccharomyces cerevisiae genome.

Authors:  Fred S Dietrich; Sylvia Voegeli; Sophie Brachat; Anita Lerch; Krista Gates; Sabine Steiner; Christine Mohr; Rainer Pöhlmann; Philippe Luedi; Sangdun Choi; Rod A Wing; Albert Flavier; Thomas D Gaffney; Peter Philippsen
Journal:  Science       Date:  2004-03-04       Impact factor: 47.728

8.  Pack-MULE transposable elements mediate gene evolution in plants.

Authors:  Ning Jiang; Zhirong Bao; Xiaoyu Zhang; Sean R Eddy; Susan R Wessler
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2004-09-30       Impact factor: 49.962

9.  Mosaic organization of orthologous sequences in grass genomes.

Authors:  Rentao Song; Victor Llaca; Joachim Messing
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2002-10       Impact factor: 9.043

10.  The sequence of rice chromosomes 11 and 12, rich in disease resistance genes and recent gene duplications.

Authors: 
Journal:  BMC Biol       Date:  2005-09-27       Impact factor: 7.431

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  26 in total

1.  Genomic associations for drought tolerance on the short arm of wheat chromosome 4B.

Authors:  Suhas Kadam; Kalpana Singh; Sanyukta Shukla; Sonia Goel; Prashant Vikram; Vasantrao Pawar; Kishor Gaikwad; Renu Khanna-Chopra; Nagendra Singh
Journal:  Funct Integr Genomics       Date:  2012-04-05       Impact factor: 3.410

2.  Comparative mapping of DNA sequences in rye (Secale cereale L.) in relation to the rice genome.

Authors:  B Hackauf; S Rudd; J R van der Voort; T Miedaner; P Wehling
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  2008-10-25       Impact factor: 5.699

3.  Reconstruction of monocotelydoneous proto-chromosomes reveals faster evolution in plants than in animals.

Authors:  Jérôme Salse; Michael Abrouk; Stéphanie Bolot; Nicolas Guilhot; Emmanuel Courcelle; Thomas Faraut; Robbie Waugh; Timothy J Close; Joachim Messing; Catherine Feuillet
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2009-08-13       Impact factor: 11.205

4.  Physical mapping of wheat aquaporin genes.

Authors:  Kerrie L Forrest; Mrinal Bhave
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  2009-11-19       Impact factor: 5.699

5.  Natural allelic diversity in OsDREB1F gene in the Indian wild rice germplasm led to ascertain its association with drought tolerance.

Authors:  Bikram Pratap Singh; Pawan Kumar Jayaswal; Balwant Singh; Pankaj Kumar Singh; Vinod Kumar; Shefali Mishra; Nisha Singh; Kabita Panda; Nagendra Kumar Singh
Journal:  Plant Cell Rep       Date:  2015-02-19       Impact factor: 4.570

6.  Seventy million years of concerted evolution of a homoeologous chromosome pair, in parallel, in major Poaceae lineages.

Authors:  Xiyin Wang; Haibao Tang; Andrew H Paterson
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2011-01-25       Impact factor: 11.277

7.  Fine mapping and targeted SNP survey using rice-wheat gene colinearity in the region of the Bo1 boron toxicity tolerance locus of bread wheat.

Authors:  Thorsten Schnurbusch; Nicholas C Collins; Russell F Eastwood; Tim Sutton; Steven P Jefferies; Peter Langridge
Journal:  Theor Appl Genet       Date:  2007-06-15       Impact factor: 5.699

8.  The Sorghum bicolor genome and the diversification of grasses.

Authors:  Andrew H Paterson; John E Bowers; Rémy Bruggmann; Inna Dubchak; Jane Grimwood; Heidrun Gundlach; Georg Haberer; Uffe Hellsten; Therese Mitros; Alexander Poliakov; Jeremy Schmutz; Manuel Spannagl; Haibao Tang; Xiyin Wang; Thomas Wicker; Arvind K Bharti; Jarrod Chapman; F Alex Feltus; Udo Gowik; Igor V Grigoriev; Eric Lyons; Christopher A Maher; Mihaela Martis; Apurva Narechania; Robert P Otillar; Bryan W Penning; Asaf A Salamov; Yu Wang; Lifang Zhang; Nicholas C Carpita; Michael Freeling; Alan R Gingle; C Thomas Hash; Beat Keller; Patricia Klein; Stephen Kresovich; Maureen C McCann; Ray Ming; Daniel G Peterson; Doreen Ware; Peter Westhoff; Klaus F X Mayer; Joachim Messing; Daniel S Rokhsar
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2009-01-29       Impact factor: 49.962

9.  Genomics in cereals: from genome-wide conserved orthologous set (COS) sequences to candidate genes for trait dissection.

Authors:  Umar Masood Quraishi; Michael Abrouk; Stéphanie Bolot; Caroline Pont; Mickael Throude; Nicolas Guilhot; Carole Confolent; Fernanda Bortolini; Sébastien Praud; Alain Murigneux; Gilles Charmet; Jerome Salse
Journal:  Funct Integr Genomics       Date:  2009-07-03       Impact factor: 3.410

10.  Evidence and evolutionary analysis of ancient whole-genome duplication in barley predating the divergence from rice.

Authors:  Thomas Thiel; Andreas Graner; Robbie Waugh; Ivo Grosse; Timothy J Close; Nils Stein
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2009-08-22       Impact factor: 3.260

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