Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Jose Luis Goicoechea is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Jose Luis Goicoechea.


PLOS Genetics | 2005

Physical and genetic structure of the maize genome reflects its complex evolutionary history.

Fusheng Wei; Edward H. Coe; William Nelson; Arvind K. Bharti; Fred Engler; Ed Butler; HyeRan Kim; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Mingsheng Chen; Seunghee Lee; Galina Fuks; Hector Sanchez-Villeda; Steven A Schroeder; Zhiwei Fang; Michael S. McMullen; Georgia L. Davis; John E. Bowers; Andrew H. Paterson; Mary L. Schaeffer; Jack M. Gardiner; Karen C. Cone; Joachim Messing; Carol Soderlund; Rod A. Wing

Maize (Zea mays L.) is one of the most important cereal crops and a model for the study of genetics, evolution, and domestication. To better understand maize genome organization and to build a framework for genome sequencing, we constructed a sequence-ready fingerprinted contig-based physical map that covers 93.5% of the genome, of which 86.1% is aligned to the genetic map. The fingerprinted contig map contains 25,908 genic markers that enabled us to align nearly 73% of the anchored maize genome to the rice genome. The distribution pattern of expressed sequence tags correlates to that of recombination. In collinear regions, 1 kb in rice corresponds to an average of 3.2 kb in maize, yet maize has a 6-fold genome size expansion. This can be explained by the fact that most rice regions correspond to two regions in maize as a result of its recent polyploid origin. Inversions account for the majority of chromosome structural variations during subsequent maize diploidization. We also find clear evidence of ancient genome duplication predating the divergence of the progenitors of maize and rice. Reconstructing the paleoethnobotany of the maize genome indicates that the progenitors of modern maize contained ten chromosomes.


Nature | 2013

Oil palm genome sequence reveals divergence of interfertile species in Old and New worlds

Rajinder Singh; Meilina Ong-Abdullah; Eng Ti Leslie Low; Mohamad Arif Abdul Manaf; Rozana Rosli; Rajanaidu Nookiah; Leslie Cheng-Li Ooi; Siew Eng Ooi; Kuang Lim Chan; Mohd Amin Ab Halim; Norazah Azizi; Jayanthi Nagappan; Blaire Bacher; Nathan Lakey; Steven W. Smith; Dong He; Michael Hogan; Muhammad A. Budiman; Ernest K. Lee; Rob DeSalle; David Kudrna; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Rod A. Wing; Richard Wilson; Robert S. Fulton; Jared M. Ordway; Robert A. Martienssen; Ravigadevi Sambanthamurthi

Oil palm is the most productive oil-bearing crop. Although it is planted on only 5% of the total world vegetable oil acreage, palm oil accounts for 33% of vegetable oil and 45% of edible oil worldwide, but increased cultivation competes with dwindling rainforest reserves. We report the 1.8-gigabase (Gb) genome sequence of the African oil palm Elaeis guineensis, the predominant source of worldwide oil production. A total of 1.535 Gb of assembled sequence and transcriptome data from 30 tissue types were used to predict at least 34,802 genes, including oil biosynthesis genes and homologues of WRINKLED1 (WRI1), and other transcriptional regulators, which are highly expressed in the kernel. We also report the draft sequence of the South American oil palm Elaeis oleifera, which has the same number of chromosomes (2n = 32) and produces fertile interspecific hybrids with E. guineensis but seems to have diverged in the New World. Segmental duplications of chromosome arms define the palaeotetraploid origin of palm trees. The oil palm sequence enables the discovery of genes for important traits as well as somaclonal epigenetic alterations that restrict the use of clones in commercial plantings, and should therefore help to achieve sustainability for biofuels and edible oils, reducing the rainforest footprint of this tropical plantation crop.


Nature Genetics | 2014

The genome sequence of African rice ( Oryza glaberrima ) and evidence for independent domestication

Muhua Wang; Yeisoo Yu; Georg Haberer; Pradeep Reddy Marri; Chuanzhu Fan; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Andrea Zuccolo; Xiang Song; Dave Kudrna; Jetty S. S. Ammiraju; Rosa Maria Cossu; Carlos Ernesto Maldonado; Jinfeng Chen; Seunghee Lee; Nick Sisneros; Wolfgang Golser; Marina Wissotski; Woo Jin Kim; Paul Sanchez; Marie Noelle Ndjiondjop; Kayode Sanni; Manyuan Long; Judith Carney; Olivier Panaud; Thomas Wicker; Carlos A. Machado; Mingsheng Chen; Klaus F. X. Mayer; Steve Rounsley; Rod A. Wing

The cultivation of rice in Africa dates back more than 3,000 years. Interestingly, African rice is not of the same origin as Asian rice (Oryza sativa L.) but rather is an entirely different species (i.e., Oryza glaberrima Steud.). Here we present a high-quality assembly and annotation of the O. glaberrima genome and detailed analyses of its evolutionary history of domestication and selection. Population genomics analyses of 20 O. glaberrima and 94 Oryza barthii accessions support the hypothesis that O. glaberrima was domesticated in a single region along the Niger river as opposed to noncentric domestication events across Africa. We detected evidence for artificial selection at a genome-wide scale, as well as with a set of O. glaberrima genes orthologous to O. sativa genes that are known to be associated with domestication, thus indicating convergent yet independent selection of a common set of genes during two geographically and culturally distinct domestication processes.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2005

The Oryza map alignment project: The golden path to unlocking the genetic potential of wild rice species

Rod A. Wing; Jetty S. S. Ammiraju; Meizhong Luo; HyeRan Kim; Yeisoo Yu; Dave Kudrna; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Wenming Wang; Will Nelson; Kiran Rao; Darshan S. Brar; Dave J. Mackill; Bin Han; Cari Soderlund; Lincoln Stein; Phillip SanMiguel; Scott A. Jackson

The wild species of the genus Oryza offer enormous potential to make a significant impact on agricultural productivity of the cultivated rice species Oryza sativa and Oryza glaberrima. To unlock the genetic potential of wild rice we have initiated a project entitled the ‘Oryza Map Alignment Project’ (OMAP) with the ultimate goal of constructing and aligning BAC/STC based physical maps of 11 wild and one cultivated rice species to the International Rice Genome Sequencing Project’s finished reference genome – O. sativa ssp. japonica c. v. Nipponbare. The 11 wild rice species comprise nine different genome types and include six diploid genomes (AA, BB, CC, EE, FF and GG) and four tetrapliod genomes (BBCC, CCDD, HHKK and HHJJ) with broad geographical distribution and ecological adaptation. In this paper we describe our strategy to construct robust physical maps of all 12 rice species with an emphasis on the AA diploid O. nivara – thought to be the progenitor of modern cultivated rice.


The Plant Cell | 2008

Dynamic Evolution of Oryza Genomes Is Revealed by Comparative Genomic Analysis of a Genus-Wide Vertical Data Set

Jetty S. S. Ammiraju; Fei Lu; Abhijit Sanyal; Yeisoo Yu; Xiang Song; Ning Jiang; Ana Clara Pontaroli; Teri Rambo; Jennifer Currie; Kristi Collura; Jayson Talag; Chuanzhu Fan; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Andrea Zuccolo; JIngfeng Chen; Jeffrey L. Bennetzen; Mingsheng Chen; Scott A. Jackson; Rod A. Wing

Oryza (23 species; 10 genome types) contains the worlds most important food crop — rice. Although the rice genome serves as an essential tool for biological research, little is known about the evolution of the other Oryza genome types. They contain a historical record of genomic changes that led to diversification of this genus around the world as well as an untapped reservoir of agriculturally important traits. To investigate the evolution of the collective Oryza genome, we sequenced and compared nine orthologous genomic regions encompassing the Adh1-Adh2 genes (from six diploid genome types) with the rice reference sequence. Our analysis revealed the architectural complexities and dynamic evolution of this region that have occurred over the past ∼15 million years. Of the 46 intact genes and four pseudogenes in the japonica genome, 38 (76%) fell into eight multigene families. Analysis of the evolutionary history of each family revealed independent and lineage-specific gain and loss of gene family members as frequent causes of synteny disruption. Transposable elements were shown to mediate massive replacement of intergenic space (>95%), gene disruption, and gene/gene fragment movement. Three cases of long-range structural variation (inversions/deletions) spanning several hundred kilobases were identified that contributed significantly to genome diversification.


Genome Biology | 2008

Construction, alignment and analysis of twelve framework physical maps that represent the ten genome types of the genus Oryza

HyeRan Kim; Bonnie L. Hurwitz; Yeisoo Yu; Kristi Collura; Navdeep Gill; Phillip SanMiguel; James C. Mullikin; Christopher A. Maher; William Nelson; Marina Wissotski; Michele Braidotti; David Kudrna; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Lincoln Stein; Doreen Ware; Scott A. Jackson; Carol Soderlund; Rod A. Wing

We describe the establishment and analysis of a genus-wide comparative framework composed of 12 bacterial artificial chromosome fingerprint and end-sequenced physical maps representing the 10 genome types of Oryza aligned to the O. sativa ssp. japonica reference genome sequence. Over 932 Mb of end sequence was analyzed for repeats, simple sequence repeats, miRNA and single nucleotide variations, providing the most extensive analysis of Oryza sequence to date.


Tropical Plant Biology | 2008

BAC-end Sequence Analysis and a Draft Physical Map of the Common Bean ( Phaseolus vulgaris L.) Genome

Jessica A. Schlueter; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Kristi Collura; Navdeep Gill; Jer-Young Lin; Yeisoo Yu; Dave Kudrna; Andrea Zuccolo; C. Eduardo Vallejos; Monica Munoz-Torres; Matthew W. Blair; Joe Tohme; Jeff Tomkins; Phillip E. McClean; Rod A. Wing; Scott A. Jackson

Common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is a legume that is an important source of dietary protein in developing countries throughout the world. Utilizing the G19833 BAC library for P. vulgaris from Clemson University, 89,017 BAC-end sequences were generated giving 62,588,675 base pairs of genomic sequence covering approximately 9.54% of the genome. Analysis of these sequences in combination with 1,404 shotgun sequences from the cultivar Bat7 revealed that approximately 49.2% of the genome contains repetitive sequence and 29.3% is genic. Compared to other legume BAC-end sequencing projects, it appears that P. vulgaris has higher predicted levels of repetitive sequence, but this may be due to a more intense identification strategy combining both similarity-based matches as well as de novo identification of repeats. In addition, fingerprints for 41,717 BACs were obtained and assembled into a draft physical map consisting of 1,183 clone contigs and 6,385 singletons with ~9x coverage of the genome.


Rice | 2009

De Novo Next Generation Sequencing of Plant Genomes

Steve Rounsley; Pradeep Reddy Marri; Yeisoo Yu; Ruifeng He; Nick Sisneros; Jose Luis Goicoechea; So Jeong Lee; Angelina Angelova; Dave Kudrna; Meizhong Luo; Jason Affourtit; Brian Desany; James Knight; Faheem Niazi; Michael Egholm; Rod A. Wing

The genome sequencing of all major food and bioenergy crops is of critical importance in the race to improve crop production to meet the future food and energy security needs of the world. Next generation sequencing technologies have brought about great improvements in sequencing throughput and cost, but do not yet allow for de novo sequencing of large repetitive genomes as found in most crop plants. We present a strategy that combines cutting edge next generation sequencing with “old school” genomics resources and allows rapid cost-effective sequencing of plant genomes.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2014

Fluorescence in situ hybridization and optical mapping to correct scaffold arrangement in the tomato genome

Lindsay A. Shearer; Lorinda K. Anderson; Hans de Jong; Sandra Smit; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Bruce A. Roe; Axin Hua; James J. Giovannoni; Stephen M. Stack

The order and orientation (arrangement) of all 91 sequenced scaffolds in the 12 pseudomolecules of the recently published tomato (Solanum lycopersicum, 2n = 2x = 24) genome sequence were positioned based on marker order in a high-density linkage map. Here, we report the arrangement of these scaffolds determined by two independent physical methods, bacterial artificial chromosome–fluorescence in situ hybridization (BAC-FISH) and optical mapping. By localizing BACs at the ends of scaffolds to spreads of tomato synaptonemal complexes (pachytene chromosomes), we showed that 45 scaffolds, representing one-third of the tomato genome, were arranged differently than predicted by the linkage map. These scaffolds occur mostly in pericentric heterochromatin where 77% of the tomato genome is located and where linkage mapping is less accurate due to reduced crossing over. Although useful for only part of the genome, optical mapping results were in complete agreement with scaffold arrangement by FISH but often disagreed with scaffold arrangement based on the linkage map. The scaffold arrangement based on FISH and optical mapping changes the positions of hundreds of markers in the linkage map, especially in heterochromatin. These results suggest that similar errors exist in pseudomolecules from other large genomes that have been assembled using only linkage maps to predict scaffold arrangement, and these errors can be corrected using FISH and/or optical mapping. Of note, BAC-FISH also permits estimates of the sizes of gaps between scaffolds, and unanchored BACs are often visualized by FISH in gaps between scaffolds and thus represent starting points for filling these gaps.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Extensive sequence divergence between the reference genomes of two elite indica rice varieties Zhenshan 97 and Minghui 63

Jianwei Zhang; Ling-Ling Chen; Feng Xing; David Kudrna; Wen Yao; Dario Copetti; Ting Mu; Weiming Li; Jia Ming Song; Weibo Xie; Seunghee Lee; Jayson Talag; Lin Shao; Yue An; Chun Liu Zhang; Yidan Ouyang; Shuai Sun; Wen Biao Jiao; Fang Lv; Bogu Du; Meizhong Luo; Carlos Ernesto Maldonado; Jose Luis Goicoechea; Lizhong Xiong; Changyin Wu; Yongzhong Xing; Dao-Xiu Zhou; Sibin Yu; Yu Zhao; Gongwei Wang

Significance Indica rice accounts for >70% of total rice production worldwide, is genetically highly diverse, and can be divided into two major varietal groups independently bred and widely cultivated in China and Southeast Asia. Here, we generated high-quality genome sequences for two elite rice varieties, Zhenshan 97 and Minghui 63, representing the two groups of indica rice and the parents of a leading rice hybrid. Comparative analyses uncovered extensive structural differences between the two genomes and complementarity in their hybrid transcriptome. These findings have general implications for understanding intraspecific variations of organisms with complex genomes. The availability of the two genomes will serve as a foundation for future genome-based explorations in rice toward both basic and applied goals. Asian cultivated rice consists of two subspecies: Oryza sativa subsp. indica and O. sativa subsp. japonica. Despite the fact that indica rice accounts for over 70% of total rice production worldwide and is genetically much more diverse, a high-quality reference genome for indica rice has yet to be published. We conducted map-based sequencing of two indica rice lines, Zhenshan 97 (ZS97) and Minghui 63 (MH63), which represent the two major varietal groups of the indica subspecies and are the parents of an elite Chinese hybrid. The genome sequences were assembled into 237 (ZS97) and 181 (MH63) contigs, with an accuracy >99.99%, and covered 90.6% and 93.2% of their estimated genome sizes. Comparative analyses of these two indica genomes uncovered surprising structural differences, especially with respect to inversions, translocations, presence/absence variations, and segmental duplications. Approximately 42% of nontransposable element related genes were identical between the two genomes. Transcriptome analysis of three tissues showed that 1,059–2,217 more genes were expressed in the hybrid than in the parents and that the expressed genes in the hybrid were much more diverse due to their divergence between the parental genomes. The public availability of two high-quality reference genomes for the indica subspecies of rice will have large-ranging implications for plant biology and crop genetic improvement.

Collaboration


Dive into the Jose Luis Goicoechea's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yeisoo Yu

University of Arizona

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Meizhong Luo

Huazhong Agricultural University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge