Ana Clara Pontaroli
University of Georgia
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ana Clara Pontaroli.
Nature Biotechnology | 2012
Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Jeremy Schmutz; Hao Wang; Ryan Percifield; Jennifer S. Hawkins; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Matt C. Estep; Liang Feng; Justin N. Vaughn; Jane Grimwood; Jerry Jenkins; Kerrie Barry; Erika Lindquist; Uffe Hellsten; Shweta Deshpande; Xuewen Wang; Xiaomei Wu; Therese Mitros; Jimmy K. Triplett; Xiaohan Yang; Chu-Yu Ye; Margarita Mauro-Herrera; Lin Wang; Pinghua Li; Manoj K. Sharma; Rita Sharma; Pamela C. Ronald; Olivier Panaud; Elizabeth A. Kellogg; Thomas P. Brutnell
We generated a high-quality reference genome sequence for foxtail millet (Setaria italica). The ∼400-Mb assembly covers ∼80% of the genome and >95% of the gene space. The assembly was anchored to a 992-locus genetic map and was annotated by comparison with >1.3 million expressed sequence tag reads. We produced more than 580 million RNA-Seq reads to facilitate expression analyses. We also sequenced Setaria viridis, the ancestral wild relative of S. italica, and identified regions of differential single-nucleotide polymorphism density, distribution of transposable elements, small RNA content, chromosomal rearrangement and segregation distortion. The genus Setaria includes natural and cultivated species that demonstrate a wide capacity for adaptation. The genetic basis of this adaptation was investigated by comparing five sequenced grass genomes. We also used the diploid Setaria genome to evaluate the ongoing genome assembly of a related polyploid, switchgrass (Panicum virgatum).
Nature Biotechnology | 2011
Eman Al-Dous; Binu George; Maryam E. Al-Mahmoud; Moneera Al-Jaber; Hao Wang; Yasmeen Salameh; Eman K. Al-Azwani; Srinivasa R. Chaluvadi; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Jeremy D. DeBarry; Vincent Arondel; John B. Ohlrogge; Imad J Saie; Khaled M Suliman-Elmeer; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Robert R Kruegger; Joel A. Malek
Date palm is one of the most economically important woody crops cultivated in the Middle East and North Africa and is a good candidate for improving agricultural yields in arid environments. Nonetheless, long generation times (5–8 years) and dioecy (separate male and female trees) have complicated its cultivation and genetic analysis. To address these issues, we assembled a draft genome for a Khalas variety female date palm, the first publicly available resource of its type for a member of the order Arecales. The ∼380 Mb sequence, spanning mainly gene-rich regions, includes >25,000 gene models and is predicted to cover ∼90% of genes and ∼60% of the genome. Sequencing of eight other cultivars, including females of the Deglet Noor and Medjool varieties and their backcrossed males, identified >3.5 million polymorphic sites, including >10,000 genic copy number variations. A small subset of these polymorphisms can distinguish multiple varieties. We identified a region of the genome linked to gender and found evidence that date palm employs an XY system of gender inheritance.
Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2007
Vanessa Corby-Harris; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Lawrence J. Shimkets; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Kristin E. Habel; Daniel E. L. Promislow
ABSTRACT Drosophila melanogaster is one of the most widely used model systems in biology. However, little is known about its associated bacterial community. As a first step towards understanding these communities, we compared bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequence libraries recovered from 11 natural populations of adult D. melanogaster. Bacteria from these sequence libraries were grouped into 74 distinct taxa, spanning the phyla Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Firmicutes, which were unevenly spread across host populations. Summed across populations, the distribution of abundance of genera was closely fit by a power law. We observed differences among host population locations both in bacterial community richness and in composition. Despite this significant spatial variation, no relationship was observed between species richness and a variety of abiotic factors, such as temperature and latitude. Overall, bacterial communities associated with adult D. melanogaster hosts are diverse and differ across host populations.
The Plant Cell | 2008
Jetty S. S. Ammiraju; Fei Lu; Abhijit Sanyal; Yeisoo Yu; Xiang Song; Ning Jiang; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Teri Rambo; Jennifer Currie; Kristi Collura; Jayson Talag; Chuanzhu Fan; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Andrea Zuccolo; JIngfeng Chen; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Mingsheng Chen; Scott A. Jackson; Rod A. Wing
Oryza (23 species; 10 genome types) contains the worlds most important food crop — rice. Although the rice genome serves as an essential tool for biological research, little is known about the evolution of the other Oryza genome types. They contain a historical record of genomic changes that led to diversification of this genus around the world as well as an untapped reservoir of agriculturally important traits. To investigate the evolution of the collective Oryza genome, we sequenced and compared nine orthologous genomic regions encompassing the Adh1-Adh2 genes (from six diploid genome types) with the rice reference sequence. Our analysis revealed the architectural complexities and dynamic evolution of this region that have occurred over the past ∼15 million years. Of the 46 intact genes and four pseudogenes in the japonica genome, 38 (76%) fell into eight multigene families. Analysis of the evolutionary history of each family revealed independent and lineage-specific gain and loss of gene family members as frequent causes of synteny disruption. Transposable elements were shown to mediate massive replacement of intergenic space (>95%), gene disruption, and gene/gene fragment movement. Three cases of long-range structural variation (inversions/deletions) spanning several hundred kilobases were identified that contributed significantly to genome diversification.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2006
Agnes P. Chan; Geo Pertea; Foo Cheung; Dan Lee; Li Zheng; Cathy Whitelaw; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Phillip SanMiguel; Yinan Yuan; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; William Brad Barbazuk; John Quackenbush; Pablo D. Rabinowicz
Maize is a staple crop of the grass family and also an excellent model for plant genetics. Owing to the large size and repetitiveness of its genome, we previously investigated two approaches to accelerate gene discovery and genome analysis in maize: methylation filtration and high C0t selection. These techniques allow the construction of gene-enriched genomic libraries by minimizing repeat sequences due to either their methylation status or their copy number, yielding a 7-fold enrichment in genic sequences relative to a random genomic library. Approximately 900 000 gene-enriched reads from maize were generated and clustered into Assembled Zea mays (AZM) sequences. Here we report the current AZM release, which consists of ∼298 Mb representing 243 807 sequence assemblies and singletons. In order to provide a repository of publicly available maize genomic sequences, we have created the TIGR Maize Database (). In this resource, we have assembled and annotated the AZMs and used available sequenced markers to anchor AZMs to maize chromosomes. We have constructed a maize repeat database and generated draft sequence assemblies of 287 maize bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clone sequences, which we annotated along with 172 additional publicly available BAC clones. All sequences, assemblies and annotations are available at the project website via web interfaces and FTP downloads.
The Plant Genome | 2009
Ana Clara Pontaroli; Rebekah L. Rogers; Qian Zhang; Melanie E. Shields; Thomas M. Davis; Kevin M. Folta; Phillip SanMiguel; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen
Thirty fosmids were randomly selected from a library of Fragaria vesca subsp. americana (cv. Pawtuckaway) DNA. These fosmid clones were individually sheared, and ∼4‐ to 5‐kb fragments were subcloned. Subclones on a single 384‐well plate were sequenced bidirectionally for each fosmid. Assembly of these data yielded 12 fosmid inserts completely sequenced, 14 inserts as 2 to 3 contiguous sequences (contigs), and 4 inserts with 5 to 9 contigs. In most cases, a single unambiguous contig order and orientation was determined, so no further finishing was required to identify genes and their relative arrangement. One hundred fifty‐eight genes were identified in the ∼1.0 Mb of nuclear genomic DNA that was assembled. Because these fosmids were randomly chosen, this allowed prediction of the genetic content of the entire ∼200 Mb F. vesca genome as about 30,500 protein‐encoding genes, plus >4700 truncated gene fragments. The genes are mostly arranged in gene‐rich regions, to a variable degree intermixed with transposable elements (TEs). The most abundant TEs in F. vesca were found to be long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons, and these comprised about 13% of the DNA analyzed. Over 30 new repeat families were discovered, mostly TEs, and the total TE content of F. vesca is predicted to be at least 16%.
BMC Plant Biology | 2010
Thomas M. Davis; Melanie E. Shields; Qian Zhang; Denise Tombolato-Terzić; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Hao Wang; Qin Yao; Phillip SanMiguel; Kevin M. Folta
BackgroundStrawberry (Fragaria spp.) is the familiar name of a group of economically important crop plants and wild relatives that also represent an emerging system for the study of gene and genome evolution. Its small stature, rapid seed-to-seed cycle, transformability and miniscule basic genome make strawberry an attractive system to study processes related to plant physiology, development and crop production; yet it lacks substantial genomics-level resources. This report addresses this deficiency by characterizing 0.71 Mbp of gene space from a diploid species (F. vesca). The twenty large genomic tracks (30-52 kb) captured as fosmid inserts comprise gene regions with roles in flowering, disease resistance, and metabolism.ResultsA detailed description of the studied regions reveals 131 Blastx-supported gene sites and eight additional EST-supported gene sites. Only 15 genes have complete EST coverage, enabling gene modelling, while 76 lack EST support. Instances of microcolinearity with Arabidopsis thaliana were identified in twelve inserts. A relatively high portion (25%) of targeted genes were found in unanticipated tandem duplications. The effectiveness of six FGENESH training models was assessed via comparisons among ab initio predictions and homology-based gene and start/stop codon identifications. Fourteen transposable-element-related sequences and 158 simple sequence repeat loci were delineated.ConclusionsThis report details the structure and content of targeted regions of the strawberry genome. The data indicate that the strawberry genome is gene-dense, with an average of one protein-encoding gene or pseudogene per 5.9 kb. Current overall EST coverage is sparse. The unexpected gene duplications and their differential patterns of EST support suggest possible subfunctionalization or pseudogenization of these sequences. This report provides a high-resolution depiction of targeted gene neighborhoods that will aid whole-genome sequence assembly, provide valuable tools for plant breeders and advance the understanding of strawberry genome evolution.
G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2013
Rajiv K. Parvathaneni; Vinod Jakkula; Francis K. Padi; Sebastien Faure; Nethra Nagarajappa; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Xiaomei Wu; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Katrien M. Devos
Pearl millet is one of the most important subsistence crops grown in India and sub-Saharan Africa. In many cereal crops, reduced height is a key trait for enhancing yield, and dwarf mutants have been extensively used in breeding to reduce yield loss due to lodging under intense management. In pearl millet, the recessive d2 dwarfing gene has been deployed widely in commercial germplasm grown in India, the United States, and Australia. Despite its importance, very little research has gone into determining the identity of the d2 gene. We used comparative information, genetic mapping in two F2 populations representing a total of some 1500 progeny, and haplotype analysis of three tall and three dwarf inbred lines to delineate the d2 region by two genetic markers that, in sorghum, define a region of 410 kb with 40 annotated genes. One of the sorghum genes annotated within this region is ABCB1, which encodes a P-glycoprotein involved in auxin transport. This gene had previously been shown to underlie the economically important dw3 dwarf mutation in sorghum. The cosegregation of ABCB1 with the d2 phenotype, its differential expression in the tall inbred ICMP 451 and the dwarf inbred Tift 23DB, and the similar phenotype of stacked lower internodes in the sorghum dw3 and pearl millet d2 mutants suggest that ABCB1 is a likely candidate for d2.
Archive | 2011
Aparna Deshpande; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Srinivasa R. Chaluvadi; Fang Lu; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen
The rhizosphere contains a great variety of microbial organisms, at least partly in response to the large quantities of organic compounds that are actively exuded by plant roots. The roles of these exudate compounds, and of the microbes in the root zone, are largely unknown. In order to dissect the relationships between soil microbes, plant exudates, and plant function, we planned to use host genetics to identify exudate–microbe correlates that segregate with specific plant genes. An exudate capture and characterization system was developed for Arabidopsis thaliana, but none of the six most-reproducible phenolic peaks analyzed by HPLC were found to vary in either ecoptypic analysis or the analysis of mutagenized populations. This surprising recalcitrance to genetic investigation led us to move immediately into the metagenomic studies that were originally planned to follow identification of plant genes that controlled microbial population and exudate presence/absence. Using approaches that distinguished between the microflora in the soil around the root, on the root surface, and inside the root, we found that each of these zones differed dramatically in microbial populations and that major differences were seen in the populations depending on the grass species employed (Zea vs. Sorghum vs. Panicum) as host. For instance, fungi were much more abundant in both quantity and diversity within and attached to the root than they were in the rhizosphere soil or in the soil prior to the presence of plant roots. These preliminary studies indicate the great potential for future investigations of the plant-determined chemical and organismal diversity in the soil.
Genome Research | 2006
Rémy Bruggmann; Arvind K. Bharti; Heidrun Gundlach; Jinsheng Lai; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Fusheng Wei; Georg Haberer; Galina Fuks; Chunguang Du; Christina Raymond; Matt C. Estep; Renyi Liu; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Agnes P. Chan; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; John Quackenbush; W. Brad Barbazuk; Rod A. Wing; Bruce W. Birren; Chad Nusbaum; Steve Rounsley; Klaus F. X. Mayer; Joachim Messing