John McElver
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Featured researches published by John McElver.
The Plant Cell | 2002
Allen Sessions; Ellen Burke; Gernot G. Presting; George Aux; John McElver; David Patton; Bob Dietrich; Patrick Ho; Johana Bacwaden; Cynthia Ko; Joseph Dallas V. Clarke; David Cotton; David Bullis; Jennifer Snell; Trini Miguel; Don Hutchison; Bill Kimmerly; Theresa Mitzel; Fumiaki Katagiri; Jane Glazebrook; Marc Law; Stephen A. Goff
A collection of Arabidopsis lines with T-DNA insertions in known sites was generated to increase the efficiency of functional genomics. A high-throughput modified thermal asymetric interlaced (TAIL)-PCR protocol was developed and used to amplify DNA fragments flanking the T-DNA left borders from ∼100,000 transformed lines. A total of 85,108 TAIL-PCR products from 52,964 T-DNA lines were sequenced and compared with the Arabidopsis genome to determine the positions of T-DNAs in each line. Predicted T-DNA insertion sites, when mapped, showed a bias against predicted coding sequences. Predicted insertion mutations in genes of interest can be identified using Arabidopsis Gene Index name searches or by BLAST (Basic Local Alignment Search Tool) search. Insertions can be confirmed by simple PCR assays on individual lines. Predicted insertions were confirmed in 257 of 340 lines tested (76%). This resource has been named SAIL (Syngenta Arabidopsis Insertion Library) and is available to the scientific community at www.tmri.org.
Plant Physiology | 2004
Iris Tzafrir; Rosanna Pena-Muralla; Allan W. Dickerman; Michael Berg; Rebecca Rogers; Steven Hutchens; T. Colleen Sweeney; John McElver; George Aux; David Patton; David W. Meinke
A long-term goal of Arabidopsis research is to define the minimal gene set needed to produce a viable plant with a normal phenotype under diverse conditions. This will require both forward and reverse genetics along with novel strategies to characterize multigene families and redundant biochemical pathways. Here we describe an initial dataset of 250 EMB genes required for normal embryo development in Arabidopsis. This represents the first large-scale dataset of essential genes in a flowering plant. When compared with 550 genes with other knockout phenotypes, EMB genes are enriched for basal cellular functions, deficient in transcription factors and signaling components, have fewer paralogs, and are more likely to have counterparts among essential genes of yeast (Saccharomyces cerevisiae) and worm (Caenorhabditis elegans). EMB genes also represent a valuable source of plant-specific proteins with unknown functions required for growth and development. Analyzing such unknowns is a central objective of genomics efforts worldwide. We focus here on 34 confirmed EMB genes with unknown functions, demonstrate that expression of these genes is not embryo-specific, validate a strategy for identifying interacting proteins through complementation with epitope-tagged proteins, and discuss the value of EMB genes in identifying novel proteins associated with important plant processes. Based on sequence comparison with essential genes in other model eukaryotes, we identify 244 candidate EMB genes without paralogs that represent promising targets for reverse genetics. These candidates should facilitate the recovery of additional genes required for seed development.
Gene | 1995
Michael C. Lorenz; R.Scott Muir; Eric Lim; John McElver; Shane C. Weber; Joseph Heitman
We describe here the generation of gene disruption constructs using PCR amplification of selectable markers with primers that provide homology to the target gene of interest. We find that regions of homology as short as 38 to 50 bp suffice to mediate homologous recombination in yeast. We describe applications of this technology to three specific yeast genes that would have been difficult to disrupt with current methods. By dispensing with the need to either clone the gene of interest or engineer a standard disruption construct, this method should facilitate analysis of sequenced genes of unknown function, which will soon include the entire yeast genome.
The Plant Cell | 1999
Amie E. Franklin; John McElver; Ivana Sunjevaric; Rodney Rothstein; Ben Bowen; W. Zacheus Cande
An open question in meiosis is whether the Rad51 recombination protein functions solely in meiotic recombination or whether it is also involved in the chromosome homology search. To address this question, we have performed three-dimensional high-resolution immunofluorescence microscopy to visualize native Rad51 structures in maize male meiocytes. Maize has two closely related RAD51 genes that are expressed at low levels in differentiated tissues and at higher levels in mitotic and meiotic tissues. Cells and nuclei were specially fixed and embedded in polyacrylamide to maintain both native chromosome structure and the three dimensionality of the specimens. Analysis of Rad51 in maize meiocytes revealed that when chromosomes condense during leptotene, Rad51 is diffuse within the nucleus. Rad51 foci form on the chromosomes at the beginning of zygotene and rise to ~500 per nucleus by mid-zygotene when chromosomes are pairing and synapsing. During chromosome pairing, we consistently found two contiguous Rad51 foci on paired chromosomes. These paired foci may identify the sites where DNA sequence homology is being compared. During pachytene, the number of Rad51 foci drops to seven to 22 per nucleus. This higher number corresponds approximately to the number of chiasmata in maize meiosis. These observations are consistent with a role for Rad51 in the homology search phase of chromosome pairing in addition to its known role in meiotic recombination.
Nucleic Acids Research | 2003
Iris Tzafrir; Allan W. Dickerman; Olga Brazhnik; Quoc Nguyen; John McElver; Catherine Frye; David Patton; David W. Meinke
The SeedGenes database (http://www.seedgenes.org) presents molecular and phenotypic information on essential, non-redundant genes of Arabidopsis that give a seed phenotype when disrupted by mutation. Experimental details are synthesized for efficient use by the community and organized into two major sections in the database, one dealing with genes and the other with mutant alleles. The database can be queried for detailed information on a single gene to create a SeedGenes Profile. Queries can also generate lists of genes or mutants that fit specified criteria. The long-term goal is to establish a complete collection of Arabidopsis genes that give a knockout phenotype. This information is needed to focus attention on genes with important cellular functions in a model plant and to assess from a genetic perspective the extent of functional redundancy in the Arabidopsis genome.
The Plant Cell | 2000
John McElver; David Patton; Michael Rumbaugh; Chun-ming Liu; Li Jun Yang; David W. Meinke
The titan (ttn) mutants of Arabidopsis exhibit dramatic alterations in mitosis and cell cycle control during seed development. Endosperm development in these mutants is characterized by the formation of giant polyploid nuclei with enlarged nucleoli. Embryo development is accompanied by significant cell enlargement in some mutants (ttn1 and ttn5) but not others (ttn2 and ttn3). We describe here the molecular cloning of TTN5 using a T-DNA–tagged allele. A second allele with a similar phenotype contains a nonsense mutation in the same coding region. The predicted protein is related to ADP ribosylation factors (ARFs), members of the RAS family of small GTP binding proteins that regulate various cellular functions in eukaryotes. TTN5 is most closely related in sequence to the ARL2 class of ARF-like proteins isolated from humans, rats, and mice. Although the cellular functions of ARL proteins remain unclear, the ttn5 phenotype is consistent with the known roles of ARFs in the regulation of intracellular vesicle transport.
Genetics | 2007
Jin Li; Lisa C. Harper; Inna N. Golubovskaya; C. Rachel Wang; David F. Weber; Robert B. Meeley; John McElver; Ben Bowen; W. Zacheus Cande
In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Rad51p plays a central role in homologous recombination and the repair of double-strand breaks (DSBs). Double mutants of the two Zea mays L. (maize) rad51 homologs are viable and develop well under normal conditions, but are male sterile and have substantially reduced seed set. Light microscopic analyses of male meiosis in these plants reveal reduced homologous pairing, synapsis of nonhomologous chromosomes, reduced bivalents at diakinesis, numerous chromosome breaks at anaphase I, and that >33% of quartets carry cells that either lack an organized nucleolus or have two nucleoli. This indicates that RAD51 is required for efficient chromosome pairing and its absence results in nonhomologous pairing and synapsis. These phenotypes differ from those of an Arabidopsis rad51 mutant that exhibits completely disrupted chromosome pairing and synapsis during meiosis. Unexpectedly, surviving female gametes produced by maize rad51 double mutants are euploid and exhibit near-normal rates of meiotic crossovers. The finding that maize rad51 double mutant embryos are extremely susceptible to radiation-induced DSBs demonstrates a conserved role for RAD51 in the repair of mitotic DSBs in plants, vertebrates, and yeast.
Genetics | 2001
John McElver; Iris Tzafrir; George Aux; Rebecca Rogers; Carl Sandidge Ashby; Kelsey Smith; Carla Thomas; Amy Schetter; Qing Zhou; Mary Ann F. Cushman; John Tossberg; Todd C. Nickle; Joshua Z. Levin; Marcus Law; David W. Meinke; David Patton
Nucleic Acids Research | 1995
Palaniyandi Manivasakam; Shane Weber; John McElver; Robert H. Schiestl
Genetics | 2001
Gregory Joseph Budziszewski; Sharon Potter Lewis; Lyn Wegrich Glover; Jennifer Reineke; Gary W. Jones; Lisa Schlater Ziemnik; Jennifer Lonowski; Beat Nyfeler; George Aux; Qing Zhou; John McElver; David Patton; Robert A. Martienssen; Ueli Grossniklaus; Hong Ma; Marcus Law; Joshua Z. Levin