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Dive into the research topics where Gayle M. Volk is active.

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Featured researches published by Gayle M. Volk.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2009

Genetic diversity and population structure in Malus sieversii, a wild progenitor species of domesticated apple

Christopher M. Richards; Gayle M. Volk; Ann A. Reilley; Adam D. Henk; Dale R. Lockwood; Patrick A. Reeves; Philip L. Forsline

Malus sieversii (Lebed.) M. Roem. is a wild progenitor species of the domesticated apple. It is found across a mountainous region of central Asia and has been the focus of several collection expeditions by the USDA-ARS-National Plant Germplasm System. This study used microsatellite variation at seven loci to estimate diversity and differentiation within M. sieversii using several complimentary approaches. Multilocus genotypes were amplified from 949 individuals representing seedling trees from 88 half-sib families from eight M. sieversii populations collected in Kazakhstan. Apportioning of genetic variation was estimated at both the family and site level. Analyses using a hierarchical model to estimate Fst showed that differentiation among individual families is more than three times greater than differentiation among sites. In addition, average gene diversity and allelic richness varied significantly among sites. A rendering of a genetic network among all sites showed that differentiation is largely congruent with geographical location. In addition, nonhierarchical Bayesian assignment methods were used to infer genetic clusters across the collection area. We detected four genetic clusters in the data set. The quality of these assignments was evaluated over multiple Markov Chain Monte Carlo runs using both posterior likelihood and stability of the assignments. The spatial pattern of genetic assignments among the eight collection sites shows two broadly distributed and two narrowly distributed clusters. These data indicate that the southwestern collection sites are more admixed and more diverse than the northern sites.


Biotechnology Advances | 2014

Potential applications of cryogenic technologies to plant genetic improvement and pathogen eradication.

Biao Wang; Ren-Rui Wang; Zhen-Hua Cui; Wen-Lu Bi; Jing-Wei Li; Bai-Quan Li; Elif Aylin Ozudogru; Gayle M. Volk; Qiao-Chun Wang

Rapid increases in human populations provide a great challenge to ensure that adequate quantities of food are available. Sustainable development of agricultural production by breeding more productive cultivars and by increasing the productive potential of existing cultivars can help meet this demand. The present paper provides information on the potential uses of cryogenic techniques in ensuring food security, including: (1) long-term conservation of a diverse germplasm and successful establishment of cryo-banks; (2) maintenance of the regenerative ability of embryogenic tissues that are frequently the target for genetic transformation; (3) enhancement of genetic transformation and plant regeneration of transformed cells, and safe, long-term conservation for transgenic materials; (4) production and maintenance of viable protoplasts for transformation and somatic hybridization; and (5) efficient production of pathogen-free plants. These roles demonstrate that cryogenic technologies offer opportunities to ensure food security.


American Journal of Botany | 2014

Genetic diversity in Malus ×domestica (Rosaceae) through time in response to domestication

Briana L. Gross; Adam D. Henk; Christopher M. Richards; Gennaro Fazio; Gayle M. Volk

UNLABELLED • PREMISE OF THE STUDY Patterns of genetic diversity in domesticated plants are affected by geographic region of origin and cultivation, intentional artificial selection, and unintentional genetic bottlenecks. While bottlenecks are mainly associated with the initial domestication process, they can also affect diversity during crop improvement. Here, we investigate the impact of the improvement process on the genetic diversity of domesticated apple in comparison with other perennial and annual fruit crops.• METHODS Apple cultivars that were developed at various times (ranging from the 13th through the 20th century) and 11 of the 15 apple cultivars that are used for 90% of the apple production in the United States were surveyed for genetic diversity based on either 9 or 19 simple sequence repeats (SSRs). Diversity was compared using standard metrics and model-based approaches based on expected heterozygosity (He) at equilibrium. Improvement bottleneck data for fruit crops were also collected from the literature.• KEY RESULTS Domesticated apples showed no significant reduction in genetic diversity through time across the last eight centuries. Diversity was generally high, with an average He > 0.7 for apples from all centuries. However, diversity of the apples currently used for the bulk of commercial production was lower.• CONCLUSIONS The improvement bottleneck in domesticated apples appears to be mild or nonexistent, in contrast to improvement bottlenecks in many annual and perennial fruit crops, as documented from the literature survey. The low diversity of the subset of cultivars used for commercial production, however, indicates that an improvement bottleneck may be in progress for this perennial crop.


Protoplasma | 2007

Plasmolysis and recovery of different cell types in cryoprotected shoot tips of Mentha × piperita

Gayle M. Volk; Ann M. Caspersen

Summary.Successful cryopreservation of plant shoot tips is dependent upon effective desiccation through osmotic or physical processes. Microscopy techniques were used to determine the extent of cellular damage and plasmolysis that occurs in peppermint (Mentha × piperita) shoot tips during the process of cryopreservation, using the cryoprotectant plant vitrification solution 2 (PVS2) (30% glycerol, 15% dimethyl sulfoxide, 15% ethylene glycol, 0.4 M sucrose) prior to liquid-nitrogen exposure. The meristem cells were the smallest and least plasmolyzed cell type of the shoot tips, while the large, older leaf and lower cortex cells were the most damaged. When treated with cryoprotectant solutions, meristem cells exhibited concave plasmolysis, suggesting that this cell type has a highly viscous protoplasm, and protoplasts have many cell wall attachment sites. Shoot tip cells were most severely plasmolyzed after PVS2 treatment, liquid-nitrogen exposure, and warming in 1.2 M sucrose. Successful recovery may be dependent upon surviving the plasmolytic conditions induced by warming and diluting treated shoot tips in 1.2 M sucrose solutions. In peppermint shoot tips, clumps of young meristem or young leaf cells survive the cryopreservation process and regenerate plants containing many shoots. Cryoprotective treatments that favor survival of small, meristematic cells and young leaf cells are most likely to produce high survival rates after liquid-nitrogen exposure.


Planta | 2006

Massive cellular disruption occurs during early imbibition of Cuphea seeds containing crystallized triacylglycerols

Gayle M. Volk; Jennifer Crane; Ann M. Caspersen; Lisa M. Hill; Candice Gardner; Christina Walters

The transition from anhydrobiotic to hydrated state occurs during early imbibition of seeds and is lethal if lipid reserves in seeds are crystalline. Low temperatures crystallize lipids during seed storage. We examine the nature of cellular damage observed in seeds of Cuphea wrightii and C. lanceolata that differ in triacylglycerol composition and phase behavior. Intracellular structure, observed using transmission electron microscopy, is profoundly and irreversibly perturbed if seeds with crystalline triacylglycerols are imbibed briefly. A brief heat treatment that melts triacylglycerols before imbibition prevents the loss of cell integrity; however, residual effects of cold treatments in C. wrightii cells are reflected by the apparent coalescence of protein and oil bodies. The timing and temperature dependence of cellular changes suggest that damage arises via a physical mechanism, perhaps as a result of shifts in hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions when triacylglycerols undergo phase changes. Stabilizers of oil body structure such as oleosins that rely on a balance of physical forces may become ineffective when triacylglycerols crystallize. Recent observations linking poor oil body stability and poor seed storage behavior are potentially explained by the phase behavior of the storage lipids. These findings directly impact the feasibility of preserving genetic resources from some tropical and subtropical species.


Biodiversity | 2008

Genebanks in the post-genomic age: Emerging roles and anticipated uses

Christina Walters; Gayle M. Volk; Christopher M. Richards

Abstract Genebanks assemble, preserve and distribute genetic resources that are critical for research on biological diversity in a changing world. Traditional users of genebanks for crop improvement and rare specimen preservation are now joined by scientists from increasingly diverse disciplines who need access to broad collections of quality-assured materials with good physical integrity plus accurate phenotypic, genotypic, ecological and provenance data. The changing role of genebanks requires a critical evaluation of the genebanking process to ensure that different conservation targets (ranging from biological communities to transcription elements) are adequately captured and maintained ex situ and made available in a useful form. To meet the needs of diverse users, genebanks require better methods to preserve viability, greater emphasis on wild-collected germplasm and enhanced interoperability of databases among various collections-based institutions. The impact of genebanks is contingent on our ability to anticipate future uses and applications of genetic resources in the broadest context.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2012

Uniform standards for genome databases in forest and fruit trees

Jill L. Wegrzyn; Doreen Main; B. Figueroa; M. Choi; J. Yu; David B. Neale; Sook Jung; Taein Lee; M. Stanton; Ping Zheng; Stephen P. Ficklin; Il-Hyung Cho; Cameron Peace; Kate Evans; Gayle M. Volk; Nnadozie Oraguzie; Chunxian Chen; Mercy A. Olmstead; G. Gmitter; A. G. Abbott

TreeGenes and tree fruit Genome Database Resources serve the international forestry and fruit tree genomics research communities, respectively. These databases hold similar sequence data and provide resources for the submission and recovery of this information in order to enable comparative genomics research. Large-scale genotype and phenotype projects have recently spawned the development of independent tools and interfaces within these repositories to deliver information to both geneticists and breeders. The increase in next generation sequencing projects has increased the amount of data as well as the scale of analysis that can be performed. These two repositories are now working towards a similar goal of archiving the diverse, independent data sets generated from genotype/phenotype experiments. This is achieved through focused development on data input standards (templates), pipelines for the storage and automated curation, and consistent annotation efforts through the application of widely accepted ontologies to improve the extraction and exchange of the data for comparative analysis. Efforts towards standardization are not limited to genotype/phenotype experiments but are also being applied to other data types to improve gene prediction and annotation for de novo sequencing projects. The resources developed towards these goals represent the first large-scale coordinated effort in plant databases to add informatics value to diverse genotype/phenotype experiments.


Journal of Biotechnology | 2015

Recovery patterns, histological observations and genetic integrity in Malus shoot tips cryopreserved using droplet-vitrification and encapsulation-dehydration procedures

Bai-Quan Li; Chaohong Feng; Min-Rui Wang; Lingyun Hu; Gayle M. Volk; Qiao-Chun Wang

A droplet-vitrification procedure is described for cryopreservation of Malus shoot tips. Survival patterns, recovery types, histological observations, and genetic integrity were compared for Malus shoot tips cryopreserved using this droplet-vitrification procedure and an encapsulation-dehydration procedure that was previously reported by us. In both procedures, three types of shoot tip recovery were observed following cryopreservation: callus formation without shoot regrowth, leaf formation without shoot regrowth, and shoot regrowth. Three categories of histological observations were also identified in cross-sections of shoot tips recovered after cryopreservation using the two cryogenic procedures. In category 1, almost all of the cells (94-95%) in the apical dome (AD) were damaged or killed and only some cells (30-32%) in the leaf primordia (LPs) survived. In category 2, only a few cells (18-20%) in the AD and some cells (30-31%) in the LPs survived. In category 3, majority of the cells (60-62%) in the AD and some cells (30-33%) in the LPs survived. These data suggest that shoot regrowth is correlated to the presence of a majority of surviving cells in the AD after liquid nitrogen exposure. No polymorphic bands were detected by inter-simple sequence repeats or by random amplified polymorphic DNA assessments, and ploidy levels analyzed by flow cytometry were unchanged when plants recovered after cryoexposure were compared to controls. The droplet-vitrification procedure appears to be robust since seven genotypes representing four Malus species and one hybrid recovered shoots following cryopreservation. Mean shoot regrowth levels of these seven genotypes were 48% in the droplet-vitrification method, which were lower than those (61%) in the encapsulation-dehydration procedure reported in our previous study, suggesting the latter may be preferred for routine cryobanking applications for Malus shoot tips.


American Journal of Botany | 2015

Chloroplast heterogeneity and historical admixture within the genus Malus

Gayle M. Volk; Adam D. Henk; Angela M. Baldo; Gennaro Fazio; C. Thomas Chao; Christopher M. Richards

UNLABELLED • PREMISE OF THE STUDY The genus Malus represents a unique and complex evolutionary context in which to study domestication. Several Malus species have provided novel alleles and traits to the cultivars. The extent of admixture among wild Malus species has not been well described, due in part to limited sampling of individuals within a taxon.• METHODS Four chloroplast regions (1681 bp total) were sequenced and aligned for 412 Malus individuals from 30 species. Phylogenetic relationships were reconstructed using maximum parsimony. The distribution of chloroplast haplotypes among species was examined using statistical parsimony, phylogenetic trees, and a median-joining network.• KEY RESULTS Chloroplast haplotypes are shared among species within Malus. Three major haplotype-sharing networks were identified. One includes species native to China, Western North America, as well as Malus domestica Borkh, and its four primary progenitor species: M. sieversii (Ledeb.) M. Roem., M. orientalis Uglitzk., M. sylvestris (L.) Mill., and M. prunifolia (Willd.) Borkh; another includes five Chinese Malus species, and a third includes the three Malus species native to Eastern North America.• CONCLUSIONS Chloroplast haplotypes found in M. domestica belong to a single, highly admixed network. Haplotypes shared between the domesticated apple and its progenitors may reflect historical introgression or the retention of ancestral polymorphisms. Multiple individuals should be sampled within Malus species to reveal haplotype heterogeneity, if complex maternal contributions to named species are to be recognized.


Plant Cell Reports | 2018

Cryobiotechnology of apple (Malus spp.): development, progress and future prospects

Min-Rui Wang; Long Chen; Jaime A. Teixeira da Silva; Gayle M. Volk; Qiao-Chun Wang

Key messageCryopreservation provides valuable genes for further breeding of elite cultivars, and cryotherapy improves the production of virus-free plants in Malus spp., thus assisting the sustainable development of the apple industry.AbstractApple (Malus spp.) is one of the most economically important temperate fruit crops. Wild Malus genetic resources and existing cultivars provide valuable genes for breeding new elite cultivars and rootstocks through traditional and biotechnological breeding programs. These valuable genes include those resistant to abiotic factors such as drought and salinity, and to biotic factors such as fungi, bacteria and aphids. Over the last three decades, great progress has been made in apple cryobiology, making Malus one of the most extensively studied plant genera with respect to cryopreservation. Explants such as pollen, seeds, in vivo dormant buds, and in vitro shoot tips have all been successfully cryopreserved, and large Malus cryobanks have been established. Cryotherapy has been used for virus eradication, to obtain virus-free apple plants. Cryopreservation provided valuable genes for further breeding of elite cultivars, and cryotherapy improved the production of virus-free plants in Malus spp., thus assisting the sustainable development of the apple industry. This review provides updated and comprehensive information on the development and progress of apple cryopreservation and cryotherapy. Future research will reveal new applications and uses for apple cryopreservation and cryotherapy.

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Adam D. Henk

Agricultural Research Service

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Ann A. Reilley

United States Department of Agriculture

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Remi Bonnart

Agricultural Research Service

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Christina Walters

Agricultural Research Service

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Gennaro Fazio

Agricultural Research Service

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