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Dive into the research topics where A. A. F. Garcia is active.

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Featured researches published by A. A. F. Garcia.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005

Tropical maize germplasm: what can we say about its genetic diversity in the light of molecular markers?

Prianda Rios Laborda; Karine Miranda Oliveira; A. A. F. Garcia; Maria Elisa Ayres Guidetti Zagatto Paterniani; A. P. de Souza

Knowledge about genetic variability of a crop allows for more efficient and effective use of resources in plant improvement programs. The genetic variation within temperate maize has been studied extensively, but the levels and patterns of diversity in tropical maize are still not well understood. Brazilian maize germplasm represents a very important pool of genetic diversity due to many past introductions of exotic material. To improve our knowledge of the genetic diversity in tropical maize inbred lines, we fingerprinted 85 lines with 569 AFLP bands and 50 microsatellite loci. These markers revealed substantial variability among lines, with high rates of polymorphism. Cluster analysis was used to identify groups of related lines. Well-defined groups were not observed, indicating that the tropical maize studied is not as well organized as temperate maize. Three types of genetic distance measurements were applied (Jaccard’s coefficient, Modified Rogers’ distance and molecular coefficient of coancestry), and the values obtained with all of them indicated that the genetic similarities were small among the lines. The different coefficients did not substantially affect the results of cluster analysis, but marker types had a large effect on genetic similarity estimates. Regardless of genetic similarity coefficient used, estimates based on AFLPs were poorly correlated with those based on SSRs. Analyses using AFLP and SSR data together do not seem to be the most efficient manner of assessing variability in highly diverse materials because the result was similar to using AFLPs alone. It was seen that molecular markers can help to organize the genetic variability and expose useful diversity for breeding purposes.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2012

Studying the genetic basis of drought tolerance in sorghum by managed stress trials and adjustments for phenological and plant height differences

P. K. Sabadin; Marcos Malosetti; Martin P. Boer; F. D. Tardin; F. G. Santos; Claudia Teixeira Guimarães; R. L. Gomide; C. L. T. Andrade; P. E. P. Albuquerque; Fernanda F. Caniato; Marcelo Mollinari; Gabriel Rodrigues Alves Margarido; B. F. Oliveira; R. E. Schaffert; A. A. F. Garcia; F. A. van Eeuwijk; Jurandir V. Magalhaes

Managed environments in the form of well watered and water stressed trials were performed to study the genetic basis of grain yield and stay green in sorghum with the objective of validating previously detected QTL. As variations in phenology and plant height may influence QTL detection for the target traits, QTL for flowering time and plant height were introduced as cofactors in QTL analyses for yield and stay green. All but one of the flowering time QTL were detected near yield and stay green QTL. Similar co-localization was observed for two plant height QTL. QTL analysis for yield, using flowering time/plant height cofactors, led to yield QTL on chromosomes 2, 3, 6, 8 and 10. For stay green, QTL on chromosomes 3, 4, 8 and 10 were not related to differences in flowering time/plant height. The physical positions for markers in QTL regions projected on the sorghum genome suggest that the previously detected plant height QTL, Sb-HT9-1, and Dw2, in addition to the maturity gene, Ma5, had a major confounding impact on the expression of yield and stay green QTL. Co-localization between an apparently novel stay green QTL and a yield QTL on chromosome 3 suggests there is potential for indirect selection based on stay green to improve drought tolerance in sorghum. Our QTL study was carried out with a moderately sized population and spanned a limited geographic range, but still the results strongly emphasize the necessity of corrections for phenology in QTL mapping for drought tolerance traits in sorghum.


Euphytica | 2010

Analysis of genomic and functional RFLP derived markers associated with sucrose content, fiber and yield QTLs in a sugarcane (Saccharum spp.) commercial cross

Luciana Rossini Pinto; A. A. F. Garcia; M. M. Pastina; Laura Helena Marcon Teixeira; J. A. Bressiani; Eugênio César Ulian; M. A. P. Bidoia; Anete Pereira de Souza

Expressed sequence tags derived markers have a great potential to be used in functional map construction and QTL tagging. In the present work, sugarcane genomic probes and expressed sequence tags having homology to genes, mostly involved in carbohydrate metabolism were used in RFLP assays to identify putative QTLs as well as their epistatic interactions for fiber content, cane yield, pol and tones of sugar per hectare, at two crop cycles in a progeny derived from a bi-parental cross of sugarcane elite materials. A hundred and twenty marker trait associations were found, of which 26 at both crop cycle and 32 only at first ratoon cane. A sucrose synthase derived marker was associated with a putative QTL having a high negative effect on cane yield and also with a QTL having a positive effect on Pol at both crop cycles. Fifty digenic epistatic marker interactions were identified for the four traits evaluated. Of these, only two were observed at both crop cycles.


BMC Research Notes | 2011

Functional markers for gene mapping and genetic diversity studies in sugarcane.

Thiago G. Marconi; Estela Araujo Costa; Hercília Rcan Miranda; Melina Cristina Mancini; Claudio Benicio Cardoso-Silva; Karine Miranda Oliveira; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Marcelo Mollinari; A. A. F. Garcia; Anete Pereira de Souza

BackgroundThe database of sugarcane expressed sequence tags (EST) offers a great opportunity for developing molecular markers that are directly associated with important agronomic traits. The development of new EST-SSR markers represents an important tool for genetic analysis. In sugarcane breeding programs, functional markers can be used to accelerate the process and select important agronomic traits, especially in the mapping of quantitative traits loci (QTL) and plant resistant pathogens or qualitative resistance loci (QRL). The aim of this work was to develop new simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers in sugarcane using the sugarcane expressed sequence tag (SUCEST database).FindingsA total of 365 EST-SSR molecular markers with trinucleotide motifs were developed and evaluated in a collection of 18 genotypes of sugarcane (15 varieties and 3 species). In total, 287 of the EST-SSRs markers amplified fragments of the expected size and were polymorphic in the analyzed sugarcane varieties. The number of alleles ranged from 2-18, with an average of 6 alleles per locus, while polymorphism information content values ranged from 0.21-0.92, with an average of 0.69. The discrimination power was high for the majority of the EST-SSRs, with an average value of 0.80. Among the markers characterized in this study some have particular interest, those that are related to bacterial defense responses, generation of precursor metabolites and energy and those involved in carbohydrate metabolic process.ConclusionsThese EST-SSR markers presented in this work can be efficiently used for genetic mapping studies of segregating sugarcane populations. The high Polymorphism Information Content (PIC) and Discriminant Power (DP) presented facilitate the QTL identification and marker-assisted selection due the association with functional regions of the genome became an important tool for the sugarcane breeding program.


BMC Proceedings | 2011

Identification of a novel QTL contributing to rust resistance in Eucalyptus

Bruno Marco de Lima; Juliana Ec Teixeira; Rodrigo Gazaffi; A. A. F. Garcia; Dario Grattapaglia; Raphaelle Kd Valle; Luis Eduardo AranhaCamargoL.E.A. Camargo

Background The genus Eucalyptus has many species that are well adapted to a wide range of environmental conditions in Brazil. However, in some areas diseases are a limiting factor, among which the Eucalyptus rust caused by Puccinia psidii Winter stands out as a destructive pathogen of the Myrtacea. The growth of plants with high levels of infection is severely compromised and these plants end up being dominated by adjacent plants which ultimately leads to their death. The most efficient method to control the disease is through the use of resistant genotypes. A major effect rust resistance QTL has already been identified [1,2], however a residual variance stays unexplained. In this context, our study aimed to identify genomic regions containing quantitative resistance loci to rust based on segregation data of a S1 progeny from an inter-specific (Eucalyptus grandis x E. urophylla) resistant clone.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2006

Development of an integrated genetic map of a sugarcane ( Saccharum spp.) commercial cross, based on a maximum-likelihood approach for estimation of linkage and linkage phases

A. A. F. Garcia; E. A. Kido; A. N. Meza; H. M. B. Souza; L. R. Pinto; M. M. Pastina; C. S. Leite; J. A. da Silva; E. C. Ulian; Antonio Figueira; Anete Pereira de Souza


Genome | 2009

Characterization of new polymorphic functional markers for sugarcane

Karine Miranda Oliveira; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Thiago G. Marconi; Marcelo Mollinari; Eugênio César Ulian; S. M. Chabregas; M. C. Falco; W. Burnquist; A. A. F. Garcia; Anete Pereira de Souza


Plant Breeding | 2000

Genetic diversity in tropical maize inbred lines: heterotic group assignment and hybrid performance determined by RFLP markers

Luciana Lasry Benchimol; C. L. De Souza; A. A. F. Garcia; P. M. S. Kono; Claudete Aparecida Mangolin; Aja Barbosa; A. S. G. Coelho; A. P. de Souza


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2012

A mixed model QTL analysis for sugarcane multiple-harvest-location trial data

M. M. Pastina; Marcos Malosetti; Rodrigo Gazaffi; Marcelo Mollinari; Gabriel Rodrigues Alves Margarido; K. M. Oliveira; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Anete Pereira de Souza; F. A. van Eeuwijk; A. A. F. Garcia


Maydica | 2003

Comparison between molecular markers and diallel crosses in the assignment of maize lines to heterotic groups

R. De M.C. Pinto; C. L. De Souza; Luciana Aparecida Carlini-Garcia; A. A. F. Garcia; A. Pereira De Souza

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Luciana Rossini Pinto

American Physical Therapy Association

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M. M. Pastina

Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária

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Rodrigo Gazaffi

Federal University of São Carlos

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A. P. de Souza

State University of Campinas

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C. L. De Souza

Escola Superior de Agricultura Luiz de Queiroz

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Estela Araujo Costa

State University of Campinas

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Eugênio César Ulian

Centro de Tecnologia Canavieira

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