H.P. Koelewijn
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by H.P. Koelewijn.
BMC Genomics | 2010
Jérôme Durand; Catherine Bodénès; Emilie Chancerel; Jean-Marc Frigerio; Giovanni G. Vendramin; Federico Sebastiani; Anna Buonamici; Oliver Gailing; H.P. Koelewijn; Fiorella Villani; Claudia Mattioni; Marcello Cherubini; Pablo G. Goicoechea; Ana Herrán; Ziortza Ikaran; Cyril Cabane; Saneyoshi Ueno; Florian Alberto; Pierre-Yves Dumoulin; Erwan Guichoux; Antoine de Daruvar; Antoine Kremer; Christophe Plomion
BackgroundExpressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) are a source of simple sequence repeats (SSRs) that can be used to develop molecular markers for genetic studies. The availability of ESTs for Quercus robur and Quercus petraea provided a unique opportunity to develop microsatellite markers to accelerate research aimed at studying adaptation of these long-lived species to their environment. As a first step toward the construction of a SSR-based linkage map of oak for quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping, we describe the mining and survey of EST-SSRs as well as a fast and cost-effective approach (bin mapping) to assign these markers to an approximate map position. We also compared the level of polymorphism between genomic and EST-derived SSRs and address the transferability of EST-SSRs in Castanea sativa (chestnut).ResultsA catalogue of 103,000 Sanger ESTs was assembled into 28,024 unigenes from which 18.6% presented one or more SSR motifs. More than 42% of these SSRs corresponded to trinucleotides. Primer pairs were designed for 748 putative unigenes. Overall 37.7% (283) were found to amplify a single polymorphic locus in a reference full-sib pedigree of Quercus robur. The usefulness of these loci for establishing a genetic map was assessed using a bin mapping approach. Bin maps were constructed for the male and female parental tree for which framework linkage maps based on AFLP markers were available. The bin set consisting of 14 highly informative offspring selected based on the number and position of crossover sites. The female and male maps comprised 44 and 37 bins, with an average bin length of 16.5 cM and 20.99 cM, respectively. A total of 256 EST-SSRs were assigned to bins and their map position was further validated by linkage mapping. EST-SSRs were found to be less polymorphic than genomic SSRs, but their transferability rate to chestnut, a phylogenetically related species to oak, was higher.ConclusionWe have generated a bin map for oak comprising 256 EST-SSRs. This resource constitutes a first step toward the establishment of a gene-based map for this genus that will facilitate the dissection of QTLs affecting complex traits of ecological importance.
Heredity | 2004
J. M. M. Van Damme; M P J Hundscheid; S. Ivanovic; H.P. Koelewijn
The mode of inheritance of the male sterility trait is crucial for understanding the evolutionary dynamics of the sexual system gynodioecy, which is the co-occurrence of female and hermaphrodite plants in natural populations. Both cytoplasmic (CMS) and nuclear (restorer) genes are known to be involved. Theoretical models usually assume a limited number of CMS genes with each a single restorer gene, while reality is more complex. In this study, it is shown that in the gynodioecious species Plantago coronopus two new CMS–restorer polymorphisms exist in addition to the two that were already known, which means four CMS–restorer systems at the species level. Furthermore, three CMS types were shown to co-occur within a single population. All new CMS types showed a multilocus system for male fertility restoration, in which both recessive and dominant restorer alleles occur. Our finding of more than two co-occurring CMS–restorer systems each with multiple restorer genes raises the question how this complex of male sterility systems is maintained in natural populations.
Molecular Ecology | 2013
Felix Gugerli; Roland Brandl; Bastien Castagneyrol; Alain Franc; Hervé Jactel; H.P. Koelewijn; Francis L. Martin; Martina Peter; Karin Pritsch; Hilke Schröder; M.J.M. Smulders; Antoine Kremer; Birgit Ziegenhagen
Understanding the interactions of co‐occurring species within and across trophic levels provides key information needed for understanding the ecological and evolutionary processes that underlie biological diversity. As genetics has only recently been integrated into the study of community‐level interactions, the time is right for a critical evaluation of potential new, gene‐based approaches to studying communities. Next‐generation molecular techniques, used in parallel with field‐based observations and manipulative experiments across spatio‐temporal gradients, are key to expanding our understanding of community‐level processes. Here, we introduce a variety of ‘‐omics’ tools, with recent studies of plant–insect herbivores and of ectomycorrhizal systems providing detailed examples of how next‐generation approaches can revolutionize our understanding of interspecific interactions. We suggest ways that novel technologies may convert community genetics from a field that relies on correlative inference to one that reveals causal mechanisms of genetic co‐variation and adaptations within communities.
Forest Ecology and Management | 2008
M.J.M. Smulders; Joan Cottrell; François Lefèvre; J.R. van der Schoot; Paul Arens; Ben Vosman; Helen Tabbener; F. Grassi; Tiziana Fossati; Stefano Castiglione; V. Krystufek; Silvia Fluch; Kornel Burg; Barbara Vornam; A. Pohl; K. Gebhardt; N. Alba; D. Agúndez; C. Maestro; E. Notivol; R. Volosyanchuk; M. Pospíšková; S. Bordács; J. Bovenschen; B.C. van Dam; H.P. Koelewijn; D. Halfmaerten; Bart Ivens; J Van Slycken; A. Vanden Broeck
Genetics | 1995
H.P. Koelewijn; J. M. M. van Damme
Genetics | 1995
H.P. Koelewijn; J. M. M. van Damme
Molecular Ecology Notes | 2002
G. N. Koorevaar; S. Ivanovic; J. M. M. Van Damme; H.P. Koelewijn; W.P.C. van 't Westende; M.J.M. Smulders; Ben Vosman
Forest Ecology and Management | 2006
J. Buiteveld; H.P. Koelewijn
Archive | 2007
Antoine Kremer; Manuela Casasoli; Teresa Barreneche; Catherine Bodénès; Paul Sisco; Thomas L. Kubisiak; Marta Scalfi; Stefano Leonardi; Erica Bakker; Joukje Buiteveld; Jeanne Romero-Severson; Kathiravetpillai Arumuganathan; Jérémy Derory; Caroline Scotti-Saintagne; Guy Roussel; Maria Evangelista Bertocchi; Christian Lexer; Ilga Porth; Fred Hebard; Catherine Clark; John E. Carlson; Christophe Plomion; H.P. Koelewijn; Fiorella Villani
Archive | 2010
An Vanden Broeck; H.P. Koelewijn; O. Honnay