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International Journal of Plant Genomics | 2008

Application of Association Mapping to Understanding the Genetic Diversity of Plant Germplasm Resources

Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Abdusattor Abdukarimov

Compared to the conventional linkage mapping, linkage disequilibrium (LD)-mapping, using the nonrandom associations of loci in haplotypes, is a powerful high-resolution mapping tool for complex quantitative traits. The recent advances in the development of unbiased association mapping approaches for plant population with their successful applications in dissecting a number of simple to complex traits in many crop species demonstrate a flourish of the approach as a “powerful gene tagging” tool for crops in the plant genomics era of 21st century. The goal of this review is to provide nonexpert readers of crop breeding community with (1) the basic concept, merits, and simple description of existing methodologies for an association mapping with the recent improvements for plant populations, and (2) the details of some of pioneer and recent studies on association mapping in various crop species to demonstrate the feasibility, success, problems, and future perspectives of the efforts in plants. This should be helpful for interested readers of international plant research community as a guideline for the basic understanding, choosing the appropriate methods, and its application.


BMC Plant Biology | 2008

Small RNA regulation of ovule development in the cotton plant, G. hirsutum L

Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Eric J. Devor; Zabardast T. Buriev; Lingyan Huang; Abdusalom Makamov; Shukhrat E. Shermatov; Tohir Bozorov; Fakhriddin N. Kushanov; Gafurjon T. Mavlonov; Abdusattor Abdukarimov

BackgroundThe involvement of small RNAs in cotton fiber development is under explored. The objective of this work was to directly clone, annotate, and analyze small RNAs of developing ovules to reveal the candidate small interfering RNA/microRNAs involved in cotton ovule and fiber development.ResultsWe cloned small RNA sequences from 0–10 days post anthesis (DPA) developing cotton ovules. A total of 6691 individual colonies were sequenced from 11 ovule small RNA libraries that yielded 2482 candidate small RNAs with a total of 583 unique sequence signatures. The majority (362, 62.1%) of these 583 sequences were 24 nt long with an additional 145 sequences (24.9%) in the 21 nt to 23 nt size range. Among all small RNA sequence signatures only three mirBase-confirmed plant microRNAs (miR172, miR390 and ath-miR853-like) were identified and only two miRNA-containing clones were recovered beyond 4 DPA. Further, among all of the small RNA sequences obtained from the small RNA pools in developing ovules, only 15 groups of sequences were observed in more than one DPA period. Of these, only five were present in more than two DPA periods. Two of these were miR-172 and miR-390 and a third was identified as 5.8S rRNA sequence. Thus, the vast majority of sequence signatures were expressed in only one DPA period and this included nearly all of the 24 nt sequences. Finally, we observed a distinct DPA-specific expression pattern among our clones based upon sequence abundance. Sequences occurring only once were far more likely to be seen in the 0 to 2 DPA periods while those occurring five or more times were the majority in later periods.ConclusionThis initial survey of small RNA sequences present in developing ovules in cotton indicates that fiber development is under complex small RNA regulation. Taken together, the results of this initial small RNA screen of developing cotton ovules is most consistent with a model, proposed by Baulcombe, that there are networks of small RNAs that are induced in a cascade fashion by the action of miRNAs and that the nature of these cascades can change from tissue to tissue and developmental stage to developmental stage.


Nature Communications | 2014

Phytochrome RNAi enhances major fibre quality and agronomic traits of the cotton Gossypium hirsutum L

Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Zabardast T. Buriev; Sukumar Saha; Johnie N. Jenkins; Abdusattor Abdukarimov; Alan E. Pepper

Simultaneous improvement of fibre quality, early-flowering, early-maturity and productivity in Upland cotton (G. hirsutum) is a challenging task for conventional breeding. The influence of red/far-red light ratio on the fibre length prompted us to examine the phenotypic effects of RNA interference (RNAi) of the cotton PHYA1 gene. Here we show a suppression of up to ~70% for the PHYA1 transcript, and compensatory overexpression of up to ~20-fold in the remaining phytochromes in somatically regenerated PHYA1 RNAi cotton plants. Two independent transformants of three generations exhibited vigorous root and vegetative growth, early-flowering, significantly improved upper half mean fibre length and an improvement in other major fibre characteristics. Small decreases in lint traits were observed but seed cotton yield was increased an average 10-17% compared with controls. RNAi-associated phenotypes were heritable and transferable via sexual hybridization. These results should aid in the development of early-maturing and productive Upland cultivars with superior fibre quality.


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2016

RNA Interference for Functional Genomics and Improvement of Cotton (Gossypium sp.)

Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Mirzakamol S. Ayubov; Khurshida A. Ubaydullaeva; Zabardast T. Buriev; Shukhrat E. Shermatov; Haydarali S. Ruziboev; Umid Shapulatov; Sukumar Saha; Mauricio Ulloa; John Z. Yu; Richard G. Percy; Eric J. Devor; Govind C. Sharma; Venkateswara R. Sripathi; Siva P. Kumpatla; Alexander R. van der Krol; Hake D. Kater; Khakimdjan Khamidov; Shavkat I. Salikhov; Johnie N. Jenkins; Abdusattor Abdukarimov; Alan E. Pepper

RNA interference (RNAi), is a powerful new technology in the discovery of genetic sequence functions, and has become a valuable tool for functional genomics of cotton (Gossypium sp.). The rapid adoption of RNAi has replaced previous antisense technology. RNAi has aided in the discovery of function and biological roles of many key cotton genes involved in fiber development, fertility and somatic embryogenesis, resistance to important biotic and abiotic stresses, and oil and seed quality improvements as well as the key agronomic traits including yield and maturity. Here, we have comparatively reviewed seminal research efforts in previously used antisense approaches and currently applied breakthrough RNAi studies in cotton, analyzing developed RNAi methodologies, achievements, limitations, and future needs in functional characterizations of cotton genes. We also highlighted needed efforts in the development of RNAi-based cotton cultivars, and their safety and risk assessment, small and large-scale field trials, and commercialization.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2010

Clustering, haplotype diversity and locations of MIC-3: a unique root-specific defense-related gene family in Upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.).

Zabardast T. Buriev; Sukumar Saha; Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Johnie N. Jenkins; Abdusattor Abdukarimov; Brian E. Scheffler; David M. Stelly

MIC-3 is a recently identified gene family shown to exhibit increased root-specific expression following nematode infection of cotton plants that are resistant to root-knot nematode. Here, we cloned and sequenced MIC-3 genes from selected diploid and tetraploid cotton species to reveal sequence differences at the molecular level and identify chromosomal locations of MIC-3 genes in Gossypium species. Detailed sequence analysis and phylogenetic clustering of MIC-3 genes indicated the presence of multiple MIC-3 gene members in Gossypium species. Haplotypes of a MIC-3 gene family member were discovered by comparative analysis among consensus sequences across genotypes within an individual clade in the phylogram to overcome the problem of duplicated loci in the tetraploid cotton. Deficiency tests of the SNPs delimited six At-genome members of the MIC-3 family clustered to chromosome arm 4sh, and one Dt-genome member to chromosome 19. Clustering was confirmed by long-PCR amplification of the intergenic regions using At-genome-specific MIC-3 primer pairs. The clustered distribution may have been favored by selection for responsiveness to evolving disease and/or pest pressures, because large variants of the MIC-3 gene family may have been recovered from small physical areas by recombination. This could give a buffer against selection pressure from a broad range of pest and pathogens in the future. To our knowledge, these are the first results on the evolution of clustering and genome-specific haplotype members of a unique cotton gene family associated with resistant response against a major pathogen.


International Journal of Plant Genomics | 2009

Methodologies for In Vitro Cloning of Small RNAs and Application for Plant Genome(s)

Eric J. Devor; Lingyan Huang; Abdusattor Abdukarimov; Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov

The “RNA revolution” that started at the end of the 20th century with the discovery of post-transcriptional gene silencing and its mechanism via RNA interference (RNAi) placed tiny 21-24 nucleotide long noncoding RNAs (ncRNAs) in the forefront of biology as one of the most important regulatory elements in a host of physiologic processes. The discovery of new classes of ncRNAs including endogenous small interfering RNAs, microRNAs, and PIWI-interacting RNAs is a hallmark in the understanding of RNA-dependent gene regulation. New generation high-throughput sequencing technologies further accelerated the studies of this “tiny world” and provided their global characterization and validation in many biological systems with sequenced genomes. Nevertheless, for the many “yet-unsequenced” plant genomes, the discovery of small RNA world requires in vitro cloning from purified cellular RNAs. Thus, reproducible methods for in vitro small RNA cloning are of paramount importance and will remain so into the foreseeable future. In this paper, we present a description of existing small RNA cloning methods as well as next-generation sequencing methods that have accelerated this research along with a description of the application of one in vitro cloning method in an initial small RNA survey in the “still unsequenced” allotetraploid cotton genome.


Chemistry of Natural Compounds | 2008

Chitin-binding antifungal protein from Ficus carica latex

Gafurjon T. Mavlonov; Kh. A. Ubaidullaeva; M. I. Rakhmanov; I. Yu. Abdurakhmonov; Abdusattor Abdukarimov

A low-molecular-weight protein with antifungal activity was isolated from freshly collected latex of the Inzhir tree (Ficus carica L.) by successive affinity chromatography over chitin, cation-exchange chromatography over SP-Sephadex C-50, and reversed-phase HPLC. The molecular weight of 6481 and the partial N-terminus sequence of the protein were determined (MALDI-TOFMS).


BMC Genetics | 2016

Development, genetic mapping and QTL association of cotton PHYA , PHYB , and HY5 -specific CAPS and dCAPS markers

Fakhriddin N. Kushanov; Alan E. Pepper; John Z. Yu; Zabardast T. Buriev; Shukhrat E. Shermatov; Sukumar Saha; Mauricio Ulloa; Johnie N. Jenkins; Abdusattor Abdukarimov; Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov

BackgroundAmong SNP markers that become increasingly valuable in molecular breeding of crop plants are the CAPS and dCAPS markers derived from the genes of interest. To date, the number of such gene-based markers is small in polyploid crop plants such as allotetraploid cotton that has A- and D-sub-genomes. The objective of this study was to develop and map new CAPS and dCAPS markers for cotton developmental-regulatory genes that are important in plant breeding programs.ResultsGossypium hirsutum and G. barbadense, are the two cultivated allotetraploid cotton species. These have distinct fiber quality and other agronomic traits. Using comparative sequence analysis of characterized GSTs of the PHYA1, PHYB, and HY5 genes of G. hirsutum and G. barbadense one PHYA1-specific Mbo I/Dpn II CAPS, one PHYB-specific Alu I dCAPS, and one HY5-specific Hinf I dCAPS cotton markers were developed. These markers have successfully differentiated the two allotetraploid genomes (AD1 and AD2) when tested in parental genotypes of ‘Texas Marker-1’ (‘TM-1’), ‘Pima 3–79’ and their F1 hybrids. The genetic mapping and chromosome substitution line-based deletion analyses revealed that PHYA1 gene is located in A-sub-genome chromosome 11, PHYB gene is in A-sub-genome chromosome 10, and HY5 gene is in D-sub-genome chromosome 24, on the reference ‘TM-1’ x ‘Pima 3–79’ RIL genetic map. Further, it was found that genetic linkage map regions containing phytochrome and HY5-specific markers were associated with major fiber quality and flowering time traits in previously published QTL mapping studies.ConclusionThis study detailed the genome mapping of three cotton phytochrome genes with newly developed CAPS and dCAPS markers. The proximity of these loci to fiber quality and other cotton QTL was demonstrated in two A-subgenome and one D-subgenome chromosomes. These candidate gene markers will be valuable for marker-assisted selection (MAS) programs to rapidly introgress G. barbadense phytochromes and/or HY5 gene (s) into G. hirsutum cotton genotypes or vice versa.


Archive | 2014

Cotton Germplasm Collection of Uzbekistan

Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Alisher A. Abdullaev; Shukhrat Shermatov Zabardast Buriev; Fahriddin N. Kushanov; Umid Shapulatov Abdusalom Makamov; Sharof S. Egamberdiev; Mirzakamol Ayubov Ilkhom B. Salakhutdinov; Mukhtor Darmanov; Azoda T. Adylova; SofiyaM. Rizaeva; Fayzulla Abdullaev; Shadman Namazov; MalohatKhalikova; Hakimjon Saydaliev; Viktor A. Avtonomov; MarinaSnamyan; Tillaboy K. Duiesenov; Jura Musaev; Abdumavlyan A.Abdullaev; Abdusattor Abdukarimov

Cultivated cotton (Gossypium spp.) is the main source of natural fiber and oilseed as well as one of the most important crops for bioenergy production. Although cotton is native to the tropics and subtropics, it is naturally cultivated in more than 80 countries. The Uzbekistan cotton germplasm collection is one of the largest among worldwide collections, representing accessions and species not only with wide geographic and ecological niches but also with large amplitude of morphobiological and genetic diversity. More than 40 Ato G and K-genomes of wild Gossypium species as well as ~7,500 cotton accessions are preserved in the Institute of Genetics and Plant Experimental Biology at the Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan (IGPEB). There are a number of lines and cultivars with useful agronomic traits (early maturing, long fiber, high yield, disease tolerant, etc.) that have been developed using Uzbek cotton germplasm resources. A history of the collection development, maintenance, management and problems of ex situ conservation as well as utilization of germplasm resources are reviewed in this paper. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2011

Molecular evolution of the clustered MIC-3 multigene family of Gossypium species

Zabardast T. Buriev; Sukumar Saha; Shukhrat E. Shermatov; Johnie N. Jenkins; Abdusattor Abdukarimov; David M. Stelly; Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov

The Gossypium MIC-3 (Meloidogyne Induced Cotton-3) gene family is of great interest for molecular evolutionary studies because of its uniqueness to Gossypium species, multi-gene content, clustered localization, and root-knot nematode resistance-associated features. Molecular evolution of the MIC-3 gene family was studied in 15 tetraploid and diploid Gossypium genotypes that collectively represent seven phylogenetically distinct genomes. Synonymous (dS) and non-synonymous (dN) nucleotide substitution rates suggest that the second of the two exons of the MIC-3 genes has been under strong positive selection pressure, while the first exon has been under strong purifying selection to preserve function. Based on nucleotide substitution rates, we conclude that MIC-3 genes are evolving by a birth-and-death process and that a ‘gene amplification’ mechanism has helped to retain all duplicate copies, which best fits with the “bait and switch” model of R-gene evolution. The data indicate MIC-3 gene duplication events occurred at various rates, once per 1 million years (MY) in the allotetraploids, once per ~2 MY in the A/F genome clade, and once per ~8 MY in the D-genome clade. Variations in the MIC-3 gene family seem to reflect evolutionary selection for increased functional stability, while also expanding the capacity to develop novel “switch” pockets for responding to diverse pests and pathogens. Such evolutionary roles are congruent with the hypothesis that members of this unique resistance gene family provide fitness advantages in Gossypium.

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Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov

Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan

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Zabardast T. Buriev

Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan

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Sukumar Saha

Agricultural Research Service

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Shukhrat E. Shermatov

Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan

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Alan E. Pepper

Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan

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Johnie N. Jenkins

Mississippi State University

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Fakhriddin N. Kushanov

Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan

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Gafurjon T. Mavlonov

Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan

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John Z. Yu

Agricultural Research Service

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