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Dive into the research topics where Elisabetta Frascaroli is active.

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Featured researches published by Elisabetta Frascaroli.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2004

Frequency and biodiversity of 2,4-diacetylphloroglucinol-producing rhizobacteria are differentially affected by the genotype of two maize inbred lines and their hybrid

Christine Picard; Elisabetta Frascaroli; Marco Bosco

Rhizobacteria (2808) were isolated on Pseudomonas-selective S1 medium from two maize inbred lines and from their hybrid at three plant growth stages. Positive phl D hybridization was found for 364 of them. The PhlD+ isolates were significantly more numerous in the rhizosphere of the hyrid than in those of parental lines. Furthermore, the frequency of PhlD+ was significantly higher for the hybrid at the flowering stage. An amplified rDNA restriction analysis showed that the hybrid genotype also increases the genetic diversity of PhlD+ populations when compared with its inbred parent lines, and this could be an effect of heterosis. Influence of the hybrid on the frequency and diversity of the bacterial PhlD+ population varied along the plant growth stage.


Genome Biology | 2015

Genetic properties of the MAGIC maize population: a new platform for high definition QTL mapping in Zea mays.

Matteo Dell’Acqua; Daniel M. Gatti; Giorgio Pea; Federica Cattonaro; Frederik Coppens; Gabriele Magris; Aye L. Hlaing; Htay Htay Aung; Hilde Nelissen; Joke Baute; Elisabetta Frascaroli; Gary A. Churchill; Dirk Inzé; Michele Morgante; Mario Enrico Pè

BackgroundMaize (Zea mays) is a globally produced crop with broad genetic and phenotypic variation. New tools that improve our understanding of the genetic basis of quantitative traits are needed to guide predictive crop breeding. We have produced the first balanced multi-parental population in maize, a tool that provides high diversity and dense recombination events to allow routine quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping in maize.ResultsWe produced 1,636 MAGIC maize recombinant inbred lines derived from eight genetically diverse founder lines. The characterization of 529 MAGIC maize lines shows that the population is a balanced, evenly differentiated mosaic of the eight founders, with mapping power and resolution strengthened by high minor allele frequencies and a fast decay of linkage disequilibrium. We show how MAGIC maize may find strong candidate genes by incorporating genome sequencing and transcriptomics data. We discuss three QTL for grain yield and three for flowering time, reporting candidate genes. Power simulations show that subsets of MAGIC maize might achieve high-power and high-definition QTL mapping.ConclusionsWe demonstrate MAGIC maize’s value in identifying the genetic bases of complex traits of agronomic relevance. The design of MAGIC maize allows the accumulation of sequencing and transcriptomics layers to guide the identification of candidate genes for a number of maize traits at different developmental stages. The characterization of the full MAGIC maize population will lead to higher power and definition in QTL mapping, and lay the basis for improved understanding of maize phenotypes, heterosis included. MAGIC maize is available to researchers.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

High‐density molecular characterization and association mapping in Ethiopian durum wheat landraces reveals high diversity and potential for wheat breeding

Dejene K. Mengistu; Yosef G. Kidane; Marcello Catellani; Elisabetta Frascaroli; Carlo Fadda; Mario Enrico Pè; Matteo Dell'Acqua

Summary Durum wheat (Triticum turgidum subsp. durum) is a key crop worldwide, and yet, its improvement and adaptation to emerging environmental threats is made difficult by the limited amount of allelic variation included in its elite pool. New allelic diversity may provide novel loci to international crop breeding through quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping in unexplored material. Here, we report the extensive molecular and phenotypic characterization of hundreds of Ethiopian durum wheat landraces and several Ethiopian improved lines. We test 81 587 markers scoring 30 155 single nucleotide polymorphisms and use them to survey the diversity, structure, and genome‐specific variation in the panel. We show the uniqueness of Ethiopian germplasm using a siding collection of Mediterranean durum wheat accessions. We phenotype the Ethiopian panel for ten agronomic traits in two highly diversified Ethiopian environments for two consecutive years and use this information to conduct a genome‐wide association study. We identify several loci underpinning agronomic traits of interest, both confirming loci already reported and describing new promising genomic regions. These loci may be efficiently targeted with molecular markers already available to conduct marker‐assisted selection in Ethiopian and international wheat. We show that Ethiopian durum wheat represents an important and mostly unexplored source of durum wheat diversity. The panel analysed in this study allows the accumulation of QTL mapping experiments, providing the initial step for a quantitative, methodical exploitation of untapped diversity in producing a better wheat.


Euphytica | 2018

Signatures of divergent selection for cold tolerance in maize

Elisabetta Frascaroli; Pierangelo Landi

Divergently selected genotypes can be used for detecting the genomic regions affecting the selected trait (selection signature). Moreover, the genetic distances (GDs) among divergently selected lines can be correlated with the agronomic performances of the crosses among them. Using as source the maize F2 of B73 × IABO78, we previously conducted four cycles of divergent recurrent selection and three cycles of divergent selection in inbreeding for cold tolerance at germination. We finally obtained 10 lines selected for low (L) and 10 lines selected for high (H) cold tolerance, which exhibited a notable divergence for both the selected and associated traits. Herein, we investigated the 20 lines and the 28 single diallel crosses among eight random lines (four L and four H); the main objectives were to identify the putative regions controlling the selected and associated traits and to study the relationships between crosses performances and GDs among their parental lines. Allele frequencies at 932 recombination blocks based on 19,220 polymorphic SNPs were obtained for the two lines’ groups; the FST calculated across sliding windows indicated 18 regions highly divergent between groups. The increasing alleles for cold tolerance were contributed by both parents, consistently with the transgressive segregations previously found. Several regions associated to DG also affected various agronomic traits. The cross performances showed some relationships with the genetic distances among parental lines for traits affected by dominance, provided that all crosses were considered, while these relationships vanished when only L × H crosses were examined.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2016

A multiparental cross population for mapping QTL for agronomic traits in durum wheat (Triticum turgidum ssp. durum)

Sara Giulia Milner; Marco Maccaferri; Bevan Emma Huang; Paola Mantovani; Andrea Massi; Elisabetta Frascaroli; Roberto Tuberosa; Silvio Salvi


Euphytica | 2016

Cold tolerance in field conditions, its inheritance, agronomic performance and genetic structure of maize lines divergently selected for germination at low temperature

Elisabetta Frascaroli; Pierangelo Landi


Journal of Plant Registrations | 2017

Registration of Maize Inbred Line Bo23 with High Cold Tolerance and Agronomic Performance for Early Sowing

Elisabetta Frascaroli; Pierangelo Landi


Frontiers in Plant Science | 2017

Genome wide association study to identify the genetic base of smallholder farmer preferences of Durum wheat traits

Yosef G. Kidane; Chiara Mancini; Dejene K. Mengistu; Elisabetta Frascaroli; Carlo Fadda; Mario Enrico Pè; Matteo Dell'Acqua


Current opinion in food science | 2017

Leveraging plant genomics for better and healthier food

Roberto Tuberosa; Elisabetta Frascaroli; Silvio Salvi


Euphytica | 2014

Inheritance of the responses to a defoliation treatment affecting cold tolerance in maize

Elisabetta Frascaroli; Pierangelo Landi

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Mario Enrico Pè

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Carlo Fadda

Bioversity International

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Giorgio Pea

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Matteo Dell'Acqua

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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