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Dive into the research topics where Jacqueline Batley is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacqueline Batley.


Science | 2014

A chromosome-based draft sequence of the hexaploid bread wheat (Triticum aestivum) genome

David Edwards; Jacqueline Batley

An ordered draft sequence of the 17-gigabase hexaploid bread wheat (Triticum aestivum) genome has been produced by sequencing isolated chromosome arms. We have annotated 124,201 gene loci distributed nearly evenly across the homeologous chromosomes and subgenomes. Comparative gene analysis of wheat subgenomes and extant diploid and tetraploid wheat relatives showed that high sequence similarity and structural conservation are retained, with limited gene loss, after polyploidization. However, across the genomes there was evidence of dynamic gene gain, loss, and duplication since the divergence of the wheat lineages. A high degree of transcriptional autonomy and no global dominance was found for the subgenomes. These insights into the genome biology of a polyploid crop provide a springboard for faster gene isolation, rapid genetic marker development, and precise breeding to meet the needs of increasing food demand worldwide.


Science | 2014

Early allopolyploid evolution in the post-neolithic Brassica napus oilseed genome

Boulos Chalhoub; Shengyi Liu; Isobel A. P. Parkin; Haibao Tang; Xiyin Wang; Julien Chiquet; Harry Belcram; Chaobo Tong; Birgit Samans; Margot Corréa; Corinne Da Silva; Jérémy Just; Cyril Falentin; Chu Shin Koh; Isabelle Le Clainche; Maria Bernard; Pascal Bento; Benjamin Noel; Karine Labadie; Adriana Alberti; Mathieu Charles; Dominique Arnaud; Hui Guo; Christian Daviaud; Salman Alamery; Kamel Jabbari; Meixia Zhao; Patrick P. Edger; Houda Chelaifa; David Tack

The genomic origins of rape oilseed Many domesticated plants arose through the meeting of multiple genomes through hybridization and genome doubling, known as polyploidy. Chalhoub et al. sequenced the polyploid genome of Brassica napus, which originated from a recent combination of two distinct genomes approximately 7500 years ago and gave rise to the crops of rape oilseed (canola), kale, and rutabaga. B. napus has undergone multiple events affecting differently sized genetic regions where a gene from one progenitor species has been converted to the copy from a second progenitor species. Some of these gene conversion events appear to have been selected by humans as part of the process of domestication and crop improvement. Science, this issue p. 950 The polyploid genome of oilseed rape exhibits evolution through homologous gene conversion. Oilseed rape (Brassica napus L.) was formed ~7500 years ago by hybridization between B. rapa and B. oleracea, followed by chromosome doubling, a process known as allopolyploidy. Together with more ancient polyploidizations, this conferred an aggregate 72× genome multiplication since the origin of angiosperms and high gene content. We examined the B. napus genome and the consequences of its recent duplication. The constituent An and Cn subgenomes are engaged in subtle structural, functional, and epigenetic cross-talk, with abundant homeologous exchanges. Incipient gene loss and expression divergence have begun. Selection in B. napus oilseed types has accelerated the loss of glucosinolate genes, while preserving expansion of oil biosynthesis genes. These processes provide insights into allopolyploid evolution and its relationship with crop domestication and improvement.


Nature Communications | 2014

The Brassica oleracea genome reveals the asymmetrical evolution of polyploid genomes

Shengyi Liu; Xinhua Yang; Chaobo Tong; David Edwards; Isobel A. P. Parkin; Meixia Zhao; Jianxin Ma; Jingyin Yu; Shunmou Huang; Xiyin Wang; Wang J; Kun Lu; Zhiyuan Fang; Ian Bancroft; Tae-Jin Yang; Qiong Hu; Xinfa Wang; Zhen Yue; Haojie Li; Linfeng Yang; Jian Wu; Qing Zhou; Wanxin Wang; Graham J. King; J. Chris Pires; Changxin Lu; Zhangyan Wu; Perumal Sampath; Zhuo Wang; Hui Guo

Polyploidization has provided much genetic variation for plant adaptive evolution, but the mechanisms by which the molecular evolution of polyploid genomes establishes genetic architecture underlying species differentiation are unclear. Brassica is an ideal model to increase knowledge of polyploid evolution. Here we describe a draft genome sequence of Brassica oleracea, comparing it with that of its sister species B. rapa to reveal numerous chromosome rearrangements and asymmetrical gene loss in duplicated genomic blocks, asymmetrical amplification of transposable elements, differential gene co-retention for specific pathways and variation in gene expression, including alternative splicing, among a large number of paralogous and orthologous genes. Genes related to the production of anticancer phytochemicals and morphological variations illustrate consequences of genome duplication and gene divergence, imparting biochemical and morphological variation to B. oleracea. This study provides insights into Brassica genome evolution and will underpin research into the many important crops in this genus.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2010

Plant genome sequencing: applications for crop improvement

David Edwards; Jacqueline Batley

DNA sequencing technology is undergoing a revolution with the commercialization of second generation technologies capable of sequencing thousands of millions of nucleotide bases in each run. The data explosion resulting from this technology is likely to continue to increase with the further development of second generation sequencing and the introduction of third generation single-molecule sequencing methods over the coming years. The question is no longer whether we can sequence crop genomes which are often large and complex, but how soon can we sequence them? Even cereal genomes such as wheat and barley which were once considered intractable are coming under the spotlight of the new sequencing technologies and an array of new projects and approaches are being established. The increasing availability of DNA sequence information enables the discovery of genes and molecular markers associated with diverse agronomic traits creating new opportunities for crop improvement. However, the challenge remains to convert this mass of data into knowledge that can be applied in crop breeding programs.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2013

Accessing complex crop genomes with next-generation sequencing

David Edwards; Jacqueline Batley; Rod J. Snowdon

Many important crop species have genomes originating from ancestral or recent polyploidisation events. Multiple homoeologous gene copies, chromosomal rearrangements and amplification of repetitive DNA within large and complex crop genomes can considerably complicate genome analysis and gene discovery by conventional, forward genetics approaches. On the other hand, ongoing technological advances in molecular genetics and genomics today offer unprecedented opportunities to analyse and access even more recalcitrant genomes. In this review, we describe next-generation sequencing and data analysis techniques that vastly improve our ability to dissect and mine genomes for causal genes underlying key traits and allelic variation of interest to breeders. We focus primarily on wheat and oilseed rape, two leading examples of major polyploid crop genomes whose size or complexity present different, significant challenges. In both cases, the latest DNA sequencing technologies, applied using quite different approaches, have enabled considerable progress towards unravelling the respective genomes. Our ability to discover the extent and distribution of genetic diversity in crop gene pools, and its relationship to yield and quality-related traits, is swiftly gathering momentum as DNA sequencing and the bioinformatic tools to deal with growing quantities of genomic data continue to develop. In the coming decade, genomic and transcriptomic sequencing, discovery and high-throughput screening of single nucleotide polymorphisms, presence–absence variations and other structural chromosomal variants in diverse germplasm collections will give detailed insight into the origins, domestication and available trait-relevant variation of polyploid crops, in the process facilitating novel approaches and possibilities for genomics-assisted breeding.


Genome Biology | 2014

Transcriptome and methylome profiling reveals relics of genome dominance in the mesopolyploid Brassica oleracea

Isobel A. P. Parkin; Chushin Koh; Haibao Tang; Stephen J. Robinson; Sateesh Kagale; Wayne E. Clarke; Christopher D. Town; John Nixon; Vivek Krishnakumar; Shelby Bidwell; Harry Belcram; Matthew G. Links; Jérémy Just; Carling Clarke; Tricia Bender; Terry Huebert; Annaliese S. Mason; J. Chris Pires; Guy C. Barker; Jonathan D. Moore; Peter Glen Walley; Sahana Manoli; Jacqueline Batley; David Edwards; Matthew N. Nelson; Xiyin Wang; Andrew H. Paterson; Graham J. King; Ian Bancroft; Boulos Chalhoub

BackgroundBrassica oleracea is a valuable vegetable species that has contributed to human health and nutrition for hundreds of years and comprises multiple distinct cultivar groups with diverse morphological and phytochemical attributes. In addition to this phenotypic wealth, B. oleracea offers unique insights into polyploid evolution, as it results from multiple ancestral polyploidy events and a final Brassiceae-specific triplication event. Further, B. oleracea represents one of the diploid genomes that formed the economically important allopolyploid oilseed, Brassica napus. A deeper understanding of B. oleracea genome architecture provides a foundation for crop improvement strategies throughout the Brassica genus.ResultsWe generate an assembly representing 75% of the predicted B. oleracea genome using a hybrid Illumina/Roche 454 approach. Two dense genetic maps are generated to anchor almost 92% of the assembled scaffolds to nine pseudo-chromosomes. Over 50,000 genes are annotated and 40% of the genome predicted to be repetitive, thus contributing to the increased genome size of B. oleracea compared to its close relative B. rapa. A snapshot of both the leaf transcriptome and methylome allows comparisons to be made across the triplicated sub-genomes, which resulted from the most recent Brassiceae-specific polyploidy event.ConclusionsDifferential expression of the triplicated syntelogs and cytosine methylation levels across the sub-genomes suggest residual marks of the genome dominance that led to the current genome architecture. Although cytosine methylation does not correlate with individual gene dominance, the independent methylation patterns of triplicated copies suggest epigenetic mechanisms play a role in the functional diversification of duplicate genes.


Bioinformatics | 2003

Redundancy based detection of sequence polymorphisms in expressed sequence tag data using autoSNP

Gary L. A. Barker; Jacqueline Batley; Helen O'Sullivan; Keith J. Edwards; David Edwards

UNLABELLED AutoSNP is a program to detect single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and insertion/deletion polymorphisms (indels) in expressed sequence tag (EST) data. The program uses d2cluster and cap3 to cluster and align EST sequences, and uses redundancy to differentiate between candidate SNPs and sequence errors. Candidate polymorphisms are identified as occurring in multiple reads within an alignment. For each candidate SNP, two measures of confidence are calculated, the redundancy of the polymorphism at a SNP locus and the co segregation of the candidate SNP with other SNPs in the alignment. AVAILABILITY The program was written in PERL and is freely available to non-commercial users by request from the authors.


Journal of Phycology | 2006

Intraspecific genetic diversity in the marine coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi (Prymnesiophyceae): the use of microsatellite analysis in marine phytoplankton population studies

María Débora Iglesias‐Rodríguez; Oscar Schofield; Jacqueline Batley; Linda K. Medlin; Paul K. Hayes

Using primer pairs for seven previously described microsatellite loci and three newly characterized microsatellite loci from the coccolithophore Emiliania huxleyi (Lohm.) Hay and Mohler, we assessed genetic variation within this species. Analysis of microsatellite length variants (alleles) was conducted for 85 E. huxleyi isolates representative of different ocean basins. These results revealed high intraspecific genetic variability within the E. huxleyi species concept. Pairwise comparison of a 1992 Coastal Fjord group (FJ92) (n=41) and a North East Atlantic (NEA) group (n=21), using FST as an indicator of genetic differentiation, revealed moderate genetic differentiation (FST=0.09894; P=0; significance level=0.05). Gene flow between the FJ92 and NEA groups was estimated to be low, which is in agreement with the moderate levels of genetic differentiation revealed by the microsatellite data. A genetic assignment method that uses genotype likelihoods to draw inference about the groups to which individuals belong was tested. Using FJ92 and NEA as reference groups, we observed that all the E. huxleyi groups tested against the two reference groups were unrelated to them. On a global biogeographical scale, E. huxleyi populations appear to be highly genetically diverse. Our findings raise the question of whether such a high degree of intraspecific genetic diversity in coccolithophores translates into variability in ecological function.


Plant Biotechnology Journal | 2009

Discovering genetic polymorphisms in next-generation sequencing data.

Michael Imelfort; Chris Duran; Jacqueline Batley; David Edwards

The ongoing revolution in DNA sequencing technology now enables the reading of thousands of millions of nucleotide bases in a single instrument run. However, this data quantity is often compromised by poor confidence in the read quality. The identification of genetic polymorphisms from this data is therefore problematic and, combined with the vast quantity of data, poses a major bioinformatics challenge. However, once these difficulties have been addressed, next-generation sequencing will offer a means to identify and characterize the wealth of genetic polymorphisms underlying the vast phenotypic variation in biological systems. We describe the recent advances in next-generation sequencing technology, together with preliminary approaches that can be applied for single nucleotide polymorphism discovery in plant species.


Current Bioinformatics | 2009

Molecular Genetic Markers: Discovery, Applications, Data Storage and Visualisation

Chris Duran; Nikki Appleby; David Edwards; Jacqueline Batley

Molecular genetic markers represent one of the most powerful tools for the analysis of genomes and enable the association of heritable traits with underlying genomic variation. Molecular marker technology has developed rapidly over the last decade and two forms of sequence based marker, Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs), also known as microsatellites, and Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) now predominate applications in modern genetic analysis. The reducing cost of DNA sequencing has led to the availability of large sequence data sets derived from whole genome sequencing and large scale Expressed Sequence Tag (EST) discovery that enable the mining of SSRs and SNPs, which may then be applied to diversity analysis, genetic trait mapping, association studies, and marker assisted selection. These markers are inexpensive, require minimal labour to produce and can frequently be associated with annotated genes. Here we review automated methods for the discovery of SSRs and SNPs and provide an overview of the diverse applications of these markers.

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Jiri Stiller

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Philipp E. Bayer

University of Western Australia

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Harsh Raman

Charles Sturt University

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A. C. Hayward

University of Queensland

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Paul J. Berkman

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Sahana Manoli

University of Queensland

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