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Dive into the research topics where Jaroslav Macha is active.

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Featured researches published by Jaroslav Macha.


Developmental Biology | 2011

A genetic map of Xenopus tropicalis.

Dan E. Wells; Laura Gutierrez; Zhenkang Xu; Vladimir Krylov; Jaroslav Macha; Kerstin P. Blankenburg; Matthew Hitchens; Larry J. Bellot; Mary Spivey; Derek L. Stemple; Andria Kowis; Yuan Ye; Shiran Pasternak; Jenetta Owen; Thu Tran; Renata Slavíková; Lucie Tumova; Tereza Tlapakova; Eva Seifertova; Steven E. Scherer; Amy K. Sater

We present a genetic map for Xenopus tropicalis, consisting of 2886 Simple Sequence Length Polymorphism (SSLP) markers. Using a bioinformatics-based strategy, we identified unique SSLPs within the X. tropicalis genome. Scaffolds from X. tropicalis genome assembly 2.0 (JGI) were scanned for Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs); unique SSRs were then tested for amplification and polymorphisms using DNA from inbred Nigerian and Ivory Coast individuals. Thus identified, the SSLPs were genotyped against a mapping cross panel of DNA samples from 190 F2 individuals. Nearly 4000 SSLPs were genotyped, yielding a 2886-marker genetic map consisting of 10 major linkage groups between 73 and 132 cM in length, and 4 smaller linkage groups between 7 and 40 cM. The total effective size of the map is 1658 cM, and the average intermarker distance for each linkage group ranged from 0.27 to 0.75 cM. Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) was carried out using probes for genes located on mapped scaffolds to assign linkage groups to chromosomes. Comparisons of this map with the X. tropicalis genome Assembly 4.1 (JGI) indicate that the map provides representation of a minimum of 66% of the X. tropicalis genome, incorporating 758 of the approximately 1300 scaffolds over 100,000 bp. The genetic map and SSLP marker database constitute an essential resource for genetic and genomic analyses in X. tropicalis.


Developmental Dynamics | 2009

Rapid gynogenetic mapping of Xenopus tropicalis mutations to chromosomes

Mustafa K. Khokha; Vladimir Krylov; Michael Reilly; Joseph G. Gall; Dipankan Bhattacharya; Chung Yan J. Cheung; Sarah Kaufman; Dang Khoa Lam; Jaroslav Macha; Catherine Ngo; Neha Prakash; Philip Schmidt; Tereza Tlapakova; Toral Trivedi; Lucie Tumova; Anita Abu-Daya; Timothy J. Geach; Elisenda Vendrell; Holly Ironfield; Ludivine Sinzelle; Amy K. Sater; Dan E. Wells; Richard M. Harland; Lyle B. Zimmerman

Pilot forward genetic screens in Xenopus tropicalis have isolated over 60 recessive mutations. Here we present a simple method for mapping mutations to chromosomes using gynogenesis and centromeric markers. When coupled with available genomic resources, gross mapping facilitates evaluation of candidate genes as well as higher resolution linkage studies. Using gynogenesis, we have mapped the genetic locations of the 10 X. tropicalis centromeres, and performed fluorescence in situ hybridization to validate these locations cytologically. We demonstrate the use of this very small set of centromeric markers to map mutations efficiently to specific chromosomes. Developmental Dynamics 238:1398–1406, 2009.


Cytogenetic and Genome Research | 2007

Localization of the single copy gene Mdh2 on Xenopus tropicalis chromosomes by FISH-TSA

Vladimir Krylov; Tereza Tlapakova; Jaroslav Macha

A single copy gene, mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase 2 (Mdh2), was localized on Xenopus tropicalis chromosomes by fluorescence in situ hybridization coupled with tyramide signal amplification (FISH-TSA). The respective cDNA was cloned and sequenced. The labeled probe hybridized with a subcentromeric region of the long arms of homologous chromosomes 3. Results of comparison of the gene localization with previously mapped X. laevis paralogs strongly suggest a common evolutionary origin of chromosomes 3 and 8 in X. laevis and chromosome 3 in X. tropicalis. This is the first time that a single copy gene has been visualized on X. tropicalis chromosomes. The FISH-TSA method gives a strong signal with a 1-kb labeled probe.


The Scientific World Journal | 2012

Assessment of Tools for Marker-Assisted Selection in a Marine Commercial Species: Significant Association between MSTN-1 Gene Polymorphism and Growth Traits

Irma Sánchez-Ramos; Ismael Cross; Jaroslav Macha; Gonzalo Martínez-Rodríguez; Vladimir Krylov; Laureana Rebordinos

Growth is a priority trait from the point of view of genetic improvement. Molecular markers linked to quantitative trait loci (QTL) have been regarded as useful for marker-assisted selection in complex traits as growth. Polymorphisms have been studied in five candidate genes influencing growth in gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata): the growth hormone (GH), insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1), myostatin (MSTN-1), prolactin (PRL), and somatolactin (SL) genes. Specimens evaluated were from a commercial broodstock comprising 131 breeders (from which 36 males and 44 females contributed to the progeny). In all samples eleven gene fragments, covering more than 13,000 bp, generated by PCR-RFLP, were analyzed; tests were made for significant associations between these markers and growth traits. ANOVA results showed a significant association between MSTN-1 gene polymorphism and growth traits. Pairwise tests revealed several RFLPs in the MSTN-1 gene with significant heterogeneity of genotypes among size groups. PRL and MSTN-1 genes presented linkage disequilibrium. The MSTN-1 gene was mapped in the centromeric region of a medium-size acrocentric chromosome pair.


BMC Genomics | 2013

Efficient high-throughput sequencing of a laser microdissected chromosome arm.

Eva Seifertova; Lyle B. Zimmerman; Michael J. Gilchrist; Jaroslav Macha; Svatava Kubickova; Halina Cernohorska; Vojtech Zarsky; Nick D.L. Owens; Abdul K. Sesay; Tereza Tlapakova; Vladimir Krylov

BackgroundGenomic sequence assemblies are key tools for a broad range of gene function and evolutionary studies. The diploid amphibian Xenopus tropicalis plays a pivotal role in these fields due to its combination of experimental flexibility, diploid genome, and early-branching tetrapod taxonomic position, having diverged from the amniote lineage ~360 million years ago. A genome assembly and a genetic linkage map have recently been made available. Unfortunately, large gaps in the linkage map attenuate long-range integrity of the genome assembly.ResultsWe laser dissected the short arm of X. tropicalis chromosome 7 for next generation sequencing and computational mapping to the reference genome. This arm is of particular interest as it encodes the sex determination locus, but its genetic map contains large gaps which undermine available genome assemblies. Whole genome amplification of 15 laser-microdissected 7p arms followed by next generation sequencing yielded ~35 million reads, over four million of which uniquely mapped to the X. tropicalis genome. Our analysis placed more than 200 previously unmapped scaffolds on the analyzed chromosome arm, providing valuable low-resolution physical map information for de novo genome assembly.ConclusionWe present a new approach for improving and validating genetic maps and sequence assemblies. Whole genome amplification of 15 microdissected chromosome arms provided sufficient high-quality material for localizing previously unmapped scaffolds and genes as well as recognizing mislocalized scaffolds.


Genome Biology and Evolution | 2013

A Large Pseudoautosomal Region on the Sex Chromosomes of the Frog Silurana tropicalis

Adam J. Bewick; Frédéric J. J. Chain; Lyle B. Zimmerman; Abdul K. Sesay; Michael J. Gilchrist; Nick D.L. Owens; Eva Seifertova; Vladimir Krylov; Jaroslav Macha; Tereza Tlapakova; Svatava Kubickova; Halina Cernohorska; Vojtech Zarsky; Ben J. Evans

Sex chromosome divergence has been documented across phylogenetically diverse species, with amphibians typically having cytologically nondiverged (“homomorphic”) sex chromosomes. With an aim of further characterizing sex chromosome divergence of an amphibian, we used “RAD-tags” and Sanger sequencing to examine sex specificity and heterozygosity in the Western clawed frog Silurana tropicalis (also known as Xenopus tropicalis). Our findings based on approximately 20 million genotype calls and approximately 200 polymerase chain reaction-amplified regions across multiple male and female genomes failed to identify a substantially sized genomic region with genotypic hallmarks of sex chromosome divergence, including in regions known to be tightly linked to the sex-determining region. We also found that expression and molecular evolution of genes linked to the sex-determining region did not differ substantially from genes in other parts of the genome. This suggests that the pseudoautosomal region, where recombination occurs, comprises a large portion of the sex chromosomes of S. tropicalis. These results may in part explain why African clawed frogs have such a high incidence of polyploidization, shed light on why amphibians have a high rate of sex chromosome turnover, and raise questions about why homomorphic sex chromosomes are so prevalent in amphibians.


BMC Genomics | 2012

Deep ancestry of mammalian X chromosome revealed by comparison with the basal tetrapod Xenopus tropicalis

Jaroslav Macha; Radka Teichmanová; Amy K. Sater; Dan E. Wells; Tereza Tlapakova; Lyle B. Zimmerman; Vladimir Krylov

BackgroundThe X and Y sex chromosomes are conspicuous features of placental mammal genomes. Mammalian sex chromosomes arose from an ordinary pair of autosomes after the proto-Y acquired a male-determining gene and degenerated due to suppression of X-Y recombination. Analysis of earlier steps in X chromosome evolution has been hampered by the long interval between the origins of teleost and amniote lineages as well as scarcity of X chromosome orthologs in incomplete avian genome assemblies.ResultsThis study clarifies the genesis and remodelling of the Eutherian X chromosome by using a combination of sequence analysis, meiotic map information, and cytogenetic localization to compare amniote genome organization with that of the amphibian Xenopus tropicalis. Nearly all orthologs of human X genes localize to X. tropicalis chromosomes 2 and 8, consistent with an ancestral X-conserved region and a single X-added region precursor. This finding contradicts a previous hypothesis of three evolutionary strata in this region. Homologies between human, opossum, chicken and frog chromosomes suggest a single X-added region predecessor in therian mammals, corresponding to opossum chromosomes 4 and 7. A more ancient X-added ancestral region, currently extant as a major part of chicken chromosome 1, is likely to have been present in the progenitor of synapsids and sauropsids. Analysis of X chromosome gene content emphasizes conservation of single protein coding genes and the role of tandem arrays in formation of novel genes.ConclusionsChromosomal regions orthologous to Therian X chromosomes have been located in the genome of the frog X. tropicalis. These X chromosome ancestral components experienced a series of fusion and breakage events to give rise to avian autosomes and mammalian sex chromosomes. The early branching tetrapod X. tropicalis’ simple diploid genome and robust synteny to amniotes greatly enhances studies of vertebrate chromosome evolution.


Chromosome Research | 2005

Localization, structure and polymorphism of two paralogous Xenopus laevis mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase genes

Tereza Tlapakova; Vladimir Krylov; Jaroslav Macha

Two paralogous mitochondrial malate dehydrogenase 2 (Mdh2) genes of Xenopus laevis have been cloned and sequenced, revealing 95% identity. Fluorescence in-situ hybridization (FISH) combined with tyramide amplification discriminates both genes; Mdh2a was localized into chromosome q3 and Mdh2b into chromosome q8. One kb cDNA probes detect both genes with 85% accuracy. The remaining signals were on the paralogous counterpart. Introns interrupt coding sequences at the same nucleotide as defined for mouse. Restriction polymorphism has been detected in the first intron of Mdh2a, while the individual variability in intron 6 of Mdh2b gene is represented by an insertion of incomplete retrotransposon L1Xl. Rates of nucleotide substitutions indicate that both genes are under similar evolutionary constraints. X. laevis Mdh2 genes can be used as markers for physical mapping and linkage analysis.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1985

Isolation and characterization of a lectin from Sarcocystis gigantea

Jaroslav Macha; Zdeňka Procházková; Lubor Červa; Jiří Gut

A hydrophobic, galactose-specific lectin was isolated by means of affinity chromatography from Sarcocystis gigantea. Adsorbents with different spacer lengths were tested. S. gigantea lectin differs from sheep muscle lectin in the spacer length needed for adsorption. Sodium dodecyl sulfate-gel electrophoresis of the S. gigantea lectin revealed a subunit size about 19 kDa and the presence of disulfide cross-linked dimers. The lectin is present in high concentration in cystozoites, cyst fluid and cyst wall material.


Chromosome Research | 2010

Preparation of Xenopus tropicalis whole chromosome painting probes using laser microdissection and reconstruction of X. laevis tetraploid karyotype by Zoo-FISH

Vladimir Krylov; Svatava Kubickova; Jiri Rubes; Jaroslav Macha; Tereza Tlapakova; Eva Seifertova; Natasa Sebkova

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Vladimir Krylov

Charles University in Prague

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Tereza Tlapakova

Charles University in Prague

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Eva Seifertova

Charles University in Prague

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Svatava Kubickova

Central European Institute of Technology

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Halina Cernohorska

Central European Institute of Technology

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Lucie Tumova

Charles University in Prague

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Vojtech Zarsky

Charles University in Prague

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