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Dive into the research topics where Karen C. Cone is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen C. Cone.


Plant Molecular Biology | 2002

Development and mapping of SSR markers for maize.

Natalya Sharopova; Michael D. McMullen; Linda Schultz; Steve G. Schroeder; Hector Sanchez-Villeda; Jack M. Gardiner; Dean Bergstrom; Katherine Houchins; Susan Melia-Hancock; Theresa A. Musket; Ngozi A. Duru; Mary L. Polacco; Keith J. Edwards; Thomas G. Ruff; James C. Register; Cory Brouwer; Richard D. Thompson; Riccardo Velasco; Emily Chin; Michael Lee; Wendy Woodman-Clikeman; Mary Jane Long; Emmanuel Liscum; Karen C. Cone; Georgia L. Davis; Edward H. Coe

Microsatellite or simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers have wide applicability for genetic analysis in crop plant improvement strategies. The objectives of this project were to isolate, characterize, and map a comprehensive set of SSR markers for maize (Zea mays L.). We developed 1051 novel SSR markers for maize from microsatellite-enriched libraries and by identification of microsatellite-containing sequences in public and private databases. Three mapping populations were used to derive map positions for 978 of these markers. The main mapping population was the intermated B73 × Mo17 (IBM) population. In mapping this intermated recombinant inbred line population, we have contributed to development of a new high-resolution map resource for maize. The primer sequences, original sequence sources, data on polymorphisms across 11 inbred lines, and map positions have been integrated with information on other public SSR markers and released through MaizeDB at URL:www.agron.missouri.edu. The maize research community now has the most detailed and comprehensive SSR marker set of any plant species.


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.


The EMBO Journal | 1990

Transactivation of anthocyanin biosynthetic genes following transfer of B regulatory genes into maize tissues.

Stephen A. Goff; Theodore M. Klein; B A Roth; Michael E. Fromm; Karen C. Cone; J P Radicella; Vicki L. Chandler

The C1, B and R genes regulating the maize anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway encode tissue‐specific regulatory proteins with similarities to transcriptional activators. The C1 and R regulatory genes are usually responsible for pigmentation of seed tissues, and the B‐Peru allele of B, but not the B‐I allele, can substitute for R function in the seed. In this study, members of the B family of regulatory genes were delivered to intact maize tissues by high velocity microprojectiles. In colorless r aleurones or embryos, the introduction of the B‐Peru genomic clone or the expressed cDNAs of B‐Peru or B‐I resulted in anthocyanin‐producing cells. Luciferase produced from the Bronze1 anthocyanin structural gene promoter was induced 100‐fold when co‐introduced with the expressed B‐Peru or B‐I cDNAs. This quantitative transactivation assay demonstrates that the proteins encoded by these two B alleles are equally able to transactivate the Bronze1 promoter. Analogous results were obtained using embryogenic callus cells. These observations suggest that one major contribution towards tissue‐specific anthocyanin synthesis controlled by the various alleles of the B and R genes is the differential expression of functionally similar proteins.


The Plant Cell | 1993

Maize anthocyanin regulatory gene pl is a duplicate of c1 that functions in the plant.

Karen C. Cone; Suzy M. Cocciolone; Frances A. Burr; Benjamin Burr

Genetic studies in maize have identified several regulatory genes that control the tissue-specific synthesis of purple anthocyanin pigments in the plant. c1 regulates pigmentation in the aleurone layer of the kernel, whereas pigmentation in the vegetative and floral tissues of the plant body depends on pl. c1 encodes a protein with the structural features of eukaryotic transcription factors and functions to control the accumulation of transcripts for the anthocyanin biosynthetic genes. Previous genetic and molecular observations have prompted the hypothesis that c1 and pl are functionally duplicate, in that they control the same set of anthocyanin structural genes but in distinct parts of the plant. Here, we show that this proposed functional similarity is reflected by DNA sequence homology between c1 and pl. Using a c1 DNA fragment as a hybridization probe, genomic and cDNA clones for pl were isolated. Comparison of pl and c1 cDNA sequences revealed that the genes encode proteins with 90% or more amino acid identity in the amino- and carboxyl-terminal domains that are known to be important for the regulatory function of the C1 protein. Consistent with the idea that the pl gene product also acts as a transcriptional activator is our finding that a functional pl allele is required for the transcription of at least three structural genes in the anthocyanin biosynthetic pathway.


Plant Physiology | 2003

Comparative Analysis of SET Domain Proteins in Maize and Arabidopsis Reveals Multiple Duplications Preceding the Divergence of Monocots and Dicots

Nathan M. Springer; Carolyn A. Napoli; David A. Selinger; Ritu Pandey; Karen C. Cone; Vicki L. Chandler; Heidi F. Kaeppler; Shawn M. Kaeppler

Histone proteins play a central role in chromatin packaging, and modification of histones is associated with chromatin accessibility. SET domain [Su(var)3-9, Enhancer-of-zeste, Trithorax] proteins are one class of proteins that have been implicated in regulating gene expression through histone methylation. The relationships of 22 SET domain proteins from maize (Zea mays) and 32 SET domain proteins from Arabidopsis were evaluated by phylogenetic analysis and domain organization. Our analysis reveals five classes of SET domain proteins in plants that can be further divided into 19 orthology groups. In some cases, such as the Enhancer of zeste-like and trithorax-like proteins, plants and animals contain homologous proteins with a similar organization of domains outside of the SET domain. However, a majority of plant SET domain proteins do not have an animal homolog with similar domain organization, suggesting that plants have unique mechanisms to establish and maintain chromatin states. Although the domains present in plant and animal SET domain proteins often differ, the domains found in the plant proteins have been generally implicated in protein-protein interactions, indicating that most SET domain proteins operate in complexes. Combined analysis of the maize and Arabidopsis SET domain proteins reveals that duplication of SET domain proteins in plants is extensive and has occurred via multiple mechanisms that preceded the divergence of monocots and dicots.


Plant Physiology | 2002

Genetic, Physical, and Informatics Resources for Maize. On the Road to an Integrated Map

Karen C. Cone; Michael D. McMullen; Irie Vroh Bi; Georgia L. Davis; Young Sun Yim; Jack M. Gardiner; Mary L. Polacco; Hector Sanchez-Villeda; Zhiwei Fang; Steven G. Schroeder; Seth A. Havermann; John E. Bowers; Andrew H. Paterson; Carol Soderlund; Fred Engler; Rod A. Wing; E. H. Coe

Maize ( Zea mays ) is among the most important crop plants in the world. For any crop plant, an integrated genetic and physical map serves as the foundation for numerous studies, especially those aimed at improving the agronomic characteristics of the plant. Once a phenotypically defined locus


Methods in Enzymology | 2005

Transgene-induced RNA interference as a tool for plant functional genomics

Karen M. McGinnis; Vicki L. Chandler; Karen C. Cone; Heidi F. Kaeppler; Shawn M. Kaeppler; Arthur Kerschen; Eric J. Richards; Lyudmila Sidorenko; Todd Smith; Nathan M. Springer; Tuya Wulan

RNA interference (RNAi) is a powerful tool for functional genomics in a number of species. The logistics and procedures for doing high-throughput RNAi to investigate the functions of large numbers of genes in Arabidopsis thaliana and in Zea mays are described. Publicly available plasmid vectors that facilitate the stable chromosomal integration of inverted repeat transgenes that trigger RNAi have been used to generate more than 50 independent transgenic lines each in Arabidopsis and maize. Analysis of mRNA abundance of the targeted genes in independent lines transformed with distinct constructs indicates that the success of RNAi-induced silencing is gene dependent. mRNA levels were not detectably reduced for some genes, but were dramatically reduced for a number of genes targeted. A common pattern was that multiple independent lines transgenic for the same construct showed the same extent of silencing. This chapter describes the procedures used to generate and test transgenic lines mediating RNAi in Arabidopsis and maize.


The Plant Cell | 1992

The maize auxotrophic mutant orange pericarp is defective in duplicate genes for tryptophan synthase beta.

A D Wright; C A Moehlenkamp; G H Perrot; M G Neuffer; Karen C. Cone

orange pericarp (orp) is a seedling lethal mutant of maize caused by mutations in the duplicate unlinked recessive loci orp1 and orp2. Mutant seedlings accumulate two tryptophan precursors, anthranilate and indole, suggesting a block in tryptophan biosynthesis. Results from feeding studies and enzyme assays indicate that the orp mutant is defective in tryptophan synthase beta activity. Thus, orp is one of only a few amino acid auxotrophic mutants to be characterized in plants. Two genes encoding tryptophan synthase beta were isolated from maize and sequenced. Both genes encode polypeptides with high homology to tryptophan synthase beta enzymes from other organisms. The cloned genes were mapped by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis to approximately the same chromosomal locations as the genetically mapped factors orp1 and orp2. RNA analysis indicates that both genes are expressed in all tissues examined from normal plants. Together, the biochemical, genetic, and molecular data verify the identity of orp1 and orp2 as duplicate structural genes for the beta subunit of tryptophan synthase.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Assessing the Efficiency of RNA Interference for Maize Functional Genomics

Karen M. McGinnis; Nick Murphy; A. R. Carlson; Anisha Akula; Chakradhar Akula; Heather Basinger; Michelle D. Carlson; Peter J. Hermanson; Nives Kovacevic; M. Annie McGill; Vishwas Seshadri; Jessica Yoyokie; Karen C. Cone; Heidi F. Kaeppler; Shawn M. Kaeppler; Nathan M. Springer

A large-scale functional genomics project was initiated to study the function of chromatin-related genes in maize (Zea mays). Transgenic lines containing short gene segments in inverted repeat orientation designed to reduce expression of target genes by RNA interference (RNAi) were isolated, propagated, and analyzed in a variety of assays. Analysis of the selectable marker expression over multiple generations revealed that most transgenes were transmitted faithfully, whereas some displayed reduced transmission or transgene silencing. A range of target-gene silencing efficiencies, from nondetectable silencing to nearly complete silencing, was revealed by semiquantitative reverse transcription-PCR analysis of transcript abundance for the target gene. In some cases, the RNAi construct was able to cause a reduction in the steady-state RNA levels of not only the target gene, but also another closely related gene. Correlation of silencing efficiency with expression level of the target gene and sequence features of the inverted repeat did not reveal any factors capable of predicting the silencing success of a particular RNAi-inducing construct. The frequencies of success of this large-scale project in maize, together with parameters for optimization at various steps, should serve as a useful framework for designing future RNAi-based functional genomics projects in crop plants.


Bioinformatics | 2003

Development of an integrated laboratory information management system for the maize mapping project

Hector Sanchez-Villeda; Steven G. Schroeder; Mary L. Polacco; Michael D. McMullen; Seth A. Havermann; Georgia L. Davis; Irie Vroh-Bi; Karen C. Cone; Natasha Sharopova; Young-Sun Yim; Linda Schultz; Ngozi A. Duru; Theresa A. Musket; Kate Houchins; Zhiwei Fang; Jack M. Gardiner; Edward H. Coe

MOTIVATION The development of an integrated genetic and physical map for the maize genome involves the generation of an enormous amount of data. Managing this data requires a system to aid in genotype scoring for different types of markers coming from both local and remote users. In addition, researchers need an efficient way to interact with genetic mapping software and with data files from automated DNA sequencing. They also need ways to manage primer data for mapping and sequencing and provide views of the integrated physical and genetic map and views of genetic map comparisons. RESULTS The MMP-LIMS system has been used successfully in a high-throughput mapping environment. The genotypes from 957 SSR, 1023 RFLP, 189 SNP, and 177 InDel markers have been entered and verified via MMP-LIMS. The system is flexible, and can be easily modified to manage data for other species. The software is freely available. AVAILABILITY To receive a copy of the iMap or cMap software, please fill out the form on our website. The other MMP-LIMS software is freely available at http://www.maizemap.org/bioinformatics.htm.

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Heidi F. Kaeppler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Shawn M. Kaeppler

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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