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Dive into the research topics where Antonio Cabrera is active.

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Featured researches published by Antonio Cabrera.


Plant Physiology | 2011

SUN Regulates Vegetative and Reproductive Organ Shape by Changing Cell Division Patterns

Shan Wu; Han Xiao; Antonio Cabrera; Tea Meulia; Esther van der Knaap

One of the major genes controlling the elongated fruit shape of tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) is SUN. In this study, we explored the roles of SUN in vegetative and reproductive development using near isogenic lines (NILs) that differ at the sun locus, and SUN overexpressors in both the wild species LA1589 (Solanum pimpinellifolium) and the cultivar Sun1642 background. Our results demonstrate that SUN controls tomato shape through redistribution of mass that is mediated by increased cell division in the longitudinal and decreased cell division in the transverse direction of the fruit. The expression of SUN is positively correlated with slender phenotypes in cotyledon, leaflet, and floral organs, an elongated ovary, and negatively correlated with seed weight. Overexpression of SUN leads to more extreme phenotypes than those shown in the NILs and include thinner leaf rachises and stems, twisted leaf rachises, increased serrations of the leaflets, and dramatically increased elongation at the proximal end of the ovary and fruit. In situ hybridizations of the NILs showed that SUN is expressed throughout the ovary and young fruit, particularly in the vascular tissues and placenta surface, and in the ovules and developing seed. The phenotypic effects resulting from high expression of SUN suggest that the gene is involved in several plant developmental processes.


Molecular Breeding | 2013

Cell number regulator genes in Prunus provide candidate genes for the control of fruit size in sweet and sour cherry

P. De Franceschi; Travis Stegmeir; Antonio Cabrera; E. van der Knaap; Umesh R. Rosyara; Audrey Sebolt; Luca Dondini; E. Dirlewanger; J. Quero-Garcia; J. A. Campoy; Amy F. Iezzoni

Striking increases in fruit size distinguish cultivated descendants from small-fruited wild progenitors for fleshy fruited species such as Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) and Prunus spp. (peach, cherry, plum, and apricot). The first fruit weight gene identified as a result of domestication and selection was the tomato FW2.2 gene. Members of the FW2.2 gene family in corn (Zea mays) have been named CNR (Cell Number Regulator) and two of them exert their effect on organ size by modulating cell number. Due to the critical roles of FW2.2/CNR genes in regulating cell number and organ size, this family provides an excellent source of candidates for fruit size genes in other domesticated species, such as those found in the Prunus genus. A total of 23 FW2.2/CNR family members were identified in the peach genome, spanning the eight Prunus chromosomes. Two of these CNRs were located within confidence intervals of major quantitative trait loci (QTL) previously discovered on linkage groups 2 and 6 in sweet cherry (Prunus avium), named PavCNR12 and PavCNR20, respectively. An analysis of haplotype, sequence, segregation and association with fruit size strongly supports a role of PavCNR12 in the sweet cherry linkage group 2 fruit size QTL, and this QTL is also likely present in sour cherry (P. cerasus). The finding that the increase in fleshy fruit size in both tomato and cherry associated with domestication may be due to changes in members of a common ancestral gene family supports the notion that similar phenotypic changes exhibited by independently domesticated taxa may have a common genetic basis.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2012

Rosaceae conserved orthologous sequences marker polymorphism in sweet cherry germplasm and construction of a SNP-based map

Antonio Cabrera; Umesh R. Rosyara; Paolo De Franceschi; Audrey Sebolt; Suneth S. Sooriyapathirana; Elisabeth Dirlewanger; José Quero-García; Mirko Schuster; Amy F. Iezzoni; Esther van der Knaap

The Rosaceae Conserved Orthologous Set (RosCOS) provides a gene-based genome-wide set of markers that have been used in comparative analyses of peach (Prunus persica), apple (Malus × domestica), and strawberry (Fragaria spp.). In order to extend the use of these RosCOS to sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.), we identified markers that are polymorphic in breeding germplasm. Ninety-five percent (595/627) of previously designed RosCOS primer pairs amplified a product in six sweet cherry cultivars predicted to represent the range of genetic diversity in breeding germplasm. A total of 45% (282/627) RosCOS were polymorphic among the six cultivars, and allele number ranged from 2 to 6, with a genome-wide mean of 2.35. A subset of 92 genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) corresponding to 76 RosCOS was analyzed in 36 founder accessions and progeny. The expected and observed heterozygosity suggested that 83% of the RosCOS were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium, implying that most RosCOS behave as neutral markers. Principal coordinate analysis (PCO) identified one wild accession and two Spanish landraces that clustered differently from the other accessions. The relatively high number of unique alleles found in the three differentially clustered selections suggested that their use as parents has potential to increase the genetic diversity in future US-bred cultivars. Of the 92 RosCOS SNPs, 81 SNPs that represented 68 genome-wide RosCOS segregated in four mapping populations. These RosCOS were mapped in four F1 populations, thereby greatly improving the genetic linkage map of sweet cherry.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2012

Rosaceae conserved orthologous set (RosCOS) markers as a tool to assess genome synteny between Malus and Fragaria

Jill M. Bushakra; Daniel J. Sargent; Antonio Cabrera; Ross N. Crowhurst; Elena Lopez Girona; Riccardo Velasco; V. Vaughan Symonds; Esther van der Knaap; Michela Troggio; Susan E. Gardiner; David Chagné

Intertribal comparisons of genome synteny between phylogenetically distant genera in Rosaceae, such as Malus (apple) and Fragaria (strawberry), have previously been hampered by a lack of transferable markers that can be used as anchor points between genetic maps. The availability of conserved orthologous set (COS) markers recently developed for this family, coupled with the release of the Malus × domestica and Fragaria vesca draft genome sequences, provide new tools for comprehensive pairwise comparisons. The genetic mapping of 56 Rosaceae COS (RosCOS) markers revealed 21 regions of genomic synteny between apple and strawberry. Information concerning the location of RosCOS markers on 15 of 17 apple linkage groups (LG) and all seven LG of strawberry was used to assess the ancestral relationships between the two genera. Four differences in orientation of ancestral chromosome fragments on extant LG were identified in comparison with previous studies, as well as two potential insertions, two potential translocations, and two potential inversions. The set of orthologous markers developed for use in genetic mapping in Rosaceae, in combination with high-throughput analysis, will allow the exploration of chromosome evolution and refinement of ancestral relationships within the family, orientation, and anchoring of genome sequences as they become available and provide resources to develop markers for nonsequenced genomes within the family.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2016

Optimizing Training Population Data and Validation of Genomic Selection for Economic Traits in Soft Winter Wheat

Amber Hoffstetter; Antonio Cabrera; Mao Huang; Clay H. Sneller

Genomic selection (GS) is a breeding tool that estimates breeding values (GEBVs) of individuals based solely on marker data by using a model built using phenotypic and marker data from a training population (TP). The effectiveness of GS increases as the correlation of GEBVs and phenotypes (accuracy) increases. Using phenotypic and genotypic data from a TP of 470 soft winter wheat lines, we assessed the accuracy of GS for grain yield, Fusarium Head Blight (FHB) resistance, softness equivalence (SE), and flour yield (FY). Four TP data sampling schemes were tested: (1) use all TP data, (2) use subsets of TP lines with low genotype-by-environment interaction, (3) use subsets of markers significantly associated with quantitative trait loci (QTL), and (4) a combination of 2 and 3. We also correlated the phenotypes of relatives of the TP to their GEBVs calculated from TP data. The GS accuracy within the TP using all TP data ranged from 0.35 (FHB) to 0.62 (FY). On average, the accuracy of GS from using subsets of data increased by 54% relative to using all TP data. Using subsets of markers selected for significant association with the target trait had the greatest impact on GS accuracy. Between-environment prediction accuracy was also increased by using data subsets. The accuracy of GS when predicting the phenotypes of TP relatives ranged from 0.00 to 0.85. These results suggest that GS could be useful for these traits and GS accuracy can be greatly improved by using subsets of TP data.


Bosque (valdivia) | 2017

Efectos combinados de la restricción hídrica, el tamaño de contenedor y la dosis de fertilizante en la supervivencia, intercambio gaseoso y atributos morfológicos en plantas de Quillaja saponaria

Sergio Espinoza; Rómulo Santelices; Antonio Cabrera; Carlos R. Magni

Quillaja saponaria is a valuable commercial and ecological Chilean native species that has suffered considerably degradation countrywide; however, the determination of the optimum characteristics of the planting stock, an important aspect in restoration projects, has receive little attention. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of container size and dose of fertilizer on morphological and physiological responses of Q. saponaria seedlings cultivated in a nursery under well-watered and water restricted conditions. After 27 days growing under contrasting watering regimes, growth, biomass allocation, and gas exchange were measured in 6-month-old seedlings. We found that survival, height and diameter increment, and root dry weight were higher in the water stressed seedlings cultivated in large containers. The water stressed seedlings cultivated in large containers also had superior stomatal conductance, however when the fertilizer dose was decreased, this trait decreased considerably. Thus, a superior performance in a water-restricted environment could be expected in those seedlings cultivated in larger containers with low fertilizer.


Bosque (valdivia) | 2016

Biomass production and carbon balance of a short rotation forestry of Populus deltoides (clone Lux) under two different cutting cycles

Antonio Cabrera; Cristiano Tozzini; Sergio Espinoza; Rómulo Santelices; Fernando Meza

The emissions of green house gases contribute to global warming. Consequently, renewable energies such as solar, wind power, hydropower and bio energy appear as alternatives for reducing these emissions. One promising source of renewable energy is forest biomass, for it is considered to have neutral CO2 balance. The problem is to quantify the amount of CO2 that is emitted for a certain amount of energy generated, compared to the CO2 emitted to generate the same amount of energy from a non-renewable source. In this paper we calculate biomass production and carbon dioxide balance of an eight-year-old Populus deltoides short rotation forestry (SRF) under two cutting cycles (harvesting every two years, biennial and every three years, triennial). We also compare the amount of energy generated per kg of CO2 emitted in the use of fossil fuels versus the amount of energy generated per kilogram of CO2 emitted. On the one hand, total biomass yield was 12.6 ± 0.9 Mg ha-1 year-1 and 15.1 ± 1.5 Mg ha-1 year-1 for biennial and triennial cutting cycles respectively. On the other hand, total emissions of CO2 for growing a poplar SRF with a cycle of eight year and biennial cutting sequence reached a value of 738.8 kg ha-1 year-1; however, triennial short total emissions are equivalent to 695.5 kg ha-1 year-1. We concluded that the use of biomass makes a positive contribution to the reduction of greenhouse gases, in particular CO2, reducing emissions almost five times compared with fossil fuels.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2008

Construction of an intra-specific sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) genetic linkage map and synteny analysis with the Prunus reference map

James W. Olmstead; Audrey Sebolt; Antonio Cabrera; Suneth S. Sooriyapathirana; Sue A. Hammar; Gloria Iriarte; Dechun Wang; Charles Y. Chen; Esther van der Knaap; Amy F. Iezzoni


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2016

Genomic selection for wheat traits and trait stability

Mao Huang; Antonio Cabrera; Amber Hoffstetter; C. A. Griffey; David A. Van Sanford; Jose M. Costa; Anne L. McKendry; Shiaoman Chao; Clay H. Sneller


Crop Science | 2014

Genetic Diversity, Linkage Disequilibrium, and Genome Evolution in Soft Winter Wheat

Antonio Cabrera; Ed Souza; Mary J. Guttieri; Anne Sturbaum; Amber Hoffstetter; Clay H. Sneller

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Rómulo Santelices

The Catholic University of America

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Sergio Espinoza

The Catholic University of America

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Amy F. Iezzoni

Michigan State University

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Audrey Sebolt

Michigan State University

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Cristiano Tozzini

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Anne Sturbaum

Agricultural Research Service

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