Koichiro Tsunewaki
Fukui Prefectural University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Koichiro Tsunewaki.
Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 2002
Yasunari Ogihara; Katsumi Isono; T. Kojima; A. Endo; Mitsumasa Hanaoka; Takashi Shiina; Toru Terachi; Shigeko Utsugi; Minoru Murata; Naoki Mori; Shigeo Takumi; Kazuho Ikeo; Takashi Gojobori; Rika Murai; Koji Murai; Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Y. Ohnishi; H. Tajiri; Koichiro Tsunewaki
Abstract. Structural features of the wheat plastome were clarified by comparison of the complete sequence of wheat chloroplast DNA with those of rice and maize chloroplast genomes. The wheat plastome consists of a 134,545-bp circular molecule with 20,703-bp inverted repeats and the same gene content as the rice and maize plastomes. However, some structural divergence was found even in the coding regions of genes. These alterations are due to illegitimate recombination between two short direct repeats and/or replication slippage. Overall comparison of chloroplast DNAs among the three cereals indicated the presence of some hot-spot regions for length mutations. Whereas the region with clustered tRNA genes and that downstream of rbcL showed divergence in a species-specific manner, the deletion patterns of ORFs in the inverted-repeat regions and the borders between the inverted repeats and the small single-copy region support the notion that wheat and rice are related more closely to each other than to maize.
Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 2000
Yasunari Ogihara; Kazuriho Isono; Toshio Kojima; Akira Endo; Mitsumasa Hanaoka; Takashi Shiina; Toru Terachi; Shigeko Utsugi; Minoru Murata; Naoki Mori; Shigeo Takumi; Kazuho Ikeo; Takashi Gojobori; Rika Murai; Koji Murai; Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Yukari Ohnishi; Hikaru Tajiri; Koichiro Tsunewaki
Libraries of plasmid clones covering the entire chloroplast (cp) genome of the common wheat,Triticum aestivum cv. Chinese Spring were constructed and assembled into contig-clones. From these, we obtained the complete nucleotide sequence of wheat chloroplast DNA—a 134,540 bp circular DNA (DDBJ accession no. AB042240) containing four species of ribosomal RNA, 30 genes for 20 species of transfer RNA, and 71 protein coding genes. Additionally, we detected five unidentified open reading frames conserved among grasses. Plasmid clones are available on request.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2000
G. Z. Wang; Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Koichiro Tsunewaki
Abstract The first comprehensive analysis was made of restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of the mitochondrial (mt) DNA of two related genera, Triticum (wheat) and Aegilops. This led to clarification of the nature of mtDNA variability and the inference of the phylogeny of the mitochondrial genomes (=chondriome). Forty-six alloplasmic lines and one euplasmic line of common wheat (2n = 42, genomes AABBDD) carrying plasmons (cytoplasmic genomes) of 47 accessions belonging to 33 species were used. This consisted of nearly all the Triticum and Aegilops species. RFLP analysis, carried out with seven mitochondrial gene probes (7.0 kb in total) in combination with three restriction endonucleases, found marked variation: Of the 168 bands detected, 165 were variable (98.2%), indicative that there is extremely high mtDNA variability in these genera. This high variability is attributed to the variation present in the intergenic regions. Most of the variation was between chondriomes of different plasmon types; only 8 bands (4.8%) between those of the same plasmon types were variable, evidence of clear chondriome divergence between different plasmon types. The first comprehensive phylogenetic trees of the chondriome were constructed on the basis of genetic distances. All but 1 of the polyploids had chondriomes closely related to those of 1 putative parent, indicative of uniparental chondriome transmission at the time of polyploid formation. The chondriome showed parallel evolutionary divergence to the plastome (chloroplast genome). Use of a minimum set of 3 mtDNA probe-enzyme combinations is proposed for tentative plasmon type identification and the screening of new plasmon types in those genera.
Euphytica | 1999
Shojiro Ikeguchi; Akihiko Hasegawa; Tatsuo Murai; Koichiro Tsunewaki
The Aegilops kotschyi cytoplasm and a 1BL-1RS translocation chromosome that consists of the long arm of wheat chromosome 1B and the short arm of rye chromosome 1R were transferred to six spring common wheat cultivars by repeated backcrossing. Resistance to leaf rust race 21B conditioned by the Lr26 gene and a secalin subunit encoded by the Sec-1 gene, both on the 1RS arm, were used as the selection markers of the translocation chromosome. Five of the six cultivars used were converted to complete male steriles, whereas the remaining one, cv. Kitamiharu 48, retained normal fertility, after transfer of both the 1BL-1RS chromosome and Ae. Kotschyi cytoplasm. Conventional gene analysis suggested that Kitamiharu 48 carries an incompletely dominant fertility-restoring gene. The F1 hybrids between the male steriles and ordinary common wheat cultivars recovered fertility only at a low level, indicating that a single dose of the Rfv1 gene on the 1BS arm of wheat is insufficient for full fertility restoration under spring-sowing condition. Our results are in clear contrast to complete fertility restoration under fall-sowing condition reported by Nonaka et al. (1993). Combination of the 1BL-1RS chromosome / Ae. Kotschyi cytoplasm system with a new fertility-restoring gene discovered in Kitamiharu 48 may provide a breakthrough for spring-type hybrid wheat.
Genes & Genetic Systems | 1999
Koichiro Tsunewaki; Kaoru Ebana
Genes & Genetic Systems | 1996
Koichiro Tsunewaki; Gui-Zhi Wang; Yoshihiro Matsuoka
Genes & Genetic Systems | 2002
Koichiro Tsunewaki; Gui-Zhi Wang; Yoshihiro Matsuoka
Genes & Genetic Systems | 1997
Yoshihiro Matsuoka; Koichiro Tsunewaki
Plant Breeding | 1995
K. Murai; Yasunari Ogihara; Koichiro Tsunewaki
Genes & Genetic Systems | 2004
Koichiro Tsunewaki