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Dive into the research topics where Linsey Newton is active.

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Featured researches published by Linsey Newton.


Oecologia | 2005

Invasive annual grasses indirectly increase virus incidence in California native perennial bunchgrasses

Carolyn M. Malmstrom; April J. McCullough; Hope A. Johnson; Linsey Newton; Elizabeth T. Borer

In California valley grasslands, Avena fatua L. and other exotic annual grasses have largely displaced native perennial bunchgrasses such as Elymus glaucus Buckley and Nassella pulchra (A. Hitchc.) Barkworth. The invasion success and continued dominance of the exotics has been generally attributed to changes in disturbance regimes and the outcome of direct competition between species. Here, we report that exotic grasses can also indirectly increase disease incidence in nearby native grasses. We found that the presence of A. fatua more than doubled incidence of infection by barley and cereal yellow dwarf viruses (B/CYDVs) in E. glaucus. Because B/CYDV infection can stunt E. glaucus and other native bunchgrasses, the indirect effects of A. fatua on virus incidence in natives suggests that apparent competition may be an additional mechanism influencing interactions among exotic and native grasses in California. A. fatua’s influence on virus incidence is likely mediated by its effects on populations of aphids that vector B/CYDVs. In our study, aphids consistently preferred exotic annuals as hosts and experienced higher fecundity on them, suggesting that the exotics can attract and amplify vector populations. To the best of our knowledge, these findings are the first demonstration that exotic plants can indirectly influence virus incidence in natives. We suggest that invasion success may be influenced by the capacity of exotic plant species to increase the pathogen loads of native species with which they compete.


The Plant Cell | 2016

Genome Reduction Uncovers a Large Dispensable Genome and Adaptive Role for Copy Number Variation in Asexually Propagated Solanum tuberosum

Michael A. Hardigan; Emily Crisovan; John P. Hamilton; Jeongwoon Kim; Parker Laimbeer; Courtney P. Leisner; Norma C. Manrique-Carpintero; Linsey Newton; Gina M. Pham; Brieanne Vaillancourt; Xueming Yang; Zixian Zeng; David S. Douches; Jiming Jiang; Richard E. Veilleux; C. Robin Buell

Asexually propagated potato shows greater copy number variation compared with sexually propagated plant species, with a strong connection to environmental response pathways. Clonally reproducing plants have the potential to bear a significantly greater mutational load than sexually reproducing species. To investigate this possibility, we examined the breadth of genome-wide structural variation in a panel of monoploid/doubled monoploid clones generated from native populations of diploid potato (Solanum tuberosum), a highly heterozygous asexually propagated plant. As rare instances of purely homozygous clones, they provided an ideal set for determining the degree of structural variation tolerated by this species and deriving its minimal gene complement. Extensive copy number variation (CNV) was uncovered, impacting 219.8 Mb (30.2%) of the potato genome with nearly 30% of genes subject to at least partial duplication or deletion, revealing the highly heterogeneous nature of the potato genome. Dispensable genes (>7000) were associated with limited transcription and/or a recent evolutionary history, with lower deletion frequency observed in genes conserved across angiosperms. Association of CNV with plant adaptation was highlighted by enrichment in gene clusters encoding functions for environmental stress response, with gene duplication playing a part in species-specific expansions of stress-related gene families. This study revealed unique impacts of CNV in a species with asexual reproductive habits and how CNV may drive adaption through evolution of key stress pathways.


Plant Physiology | 2016

A G-Box-Like Motif Is Necessary for Transcriptional Regulation by Circadian Pseudo-Response Regulators in Arabidopsis

Tiffany L. Liu; Linsey Newton; Ming Jung Liu; Shin Han Shiu; Eva M. Farré

Pseudo-response regulators associate with overlapping sets of putative target genes and require G-box-like cis-regulatory elements for transcriptional activity. PSEUDO-RESPONSE REGULATORs (PRRs) play overlapping and distinct roles in maintaining circadian rhythms and regulating diverse biological processes, including the photoperiodic control of flowering, growth, and abiotic stress responses. PRRs act as transcriptional repressors and associate with chromatin via their conserved C-terminal CCT (CONSTANS, CONSTANS-like, and TIMING OF CAB EXPRESSION 1 [TOC1/PRR1]) domains by a still-poorly understood mechanism. Here, we identified genome-wide targets of PRR9 using chromatin immunoprecipitation followed by high-throughput sequencing (ChIP-seq) and compared them with PRR7, PRR5, and TOC1/PRR1 ChIP-seq data. We found that PRR binding sites are located within genomic regions of low nucleosome occupancy and high DNase I hypersensitivity. Moreover, conserved noncoding regions among Brassicaceae species are enriched around PRR binding sites, indicating that PRRs associate with functionally relevant cis-regulatory regions. The PRRs shared a significant number of binding regions, and our results indicate that they coordinately restrict the expression of target genes to around dawn. A G-box-like motif was overrepresented at PRR binding regions, and we showed that this motif is necessary for mediating transcriptional regulation of CIRCADIAN CLOCK ASSOCIATED 1 and PRR9 by the PRRs. Our results further our understanding of how PRRs target specific promoters and provide an extensive resource for studying circadian regulatory networks in plants.


Journal of Experimental Botany | 2014

Light and the circadian clock mediate time-specific changes in sensitivity to UV-B stress under light/dark cycles

Tomomi Takeuchi; Linsey Newton; Alyssa Burkhardt; Saundra Mason; Eva M. Farré

Summary The circadian clock and light influence the time dependence of the UV-B stress response. Circadian clock components regulate UV-B-mediated expression in a gene-by-gene-specific manner in Arabidopsis.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Genome diversity of tuber-bearing Solanum uncovers complex evolutionary history and targets of domestication in the cultivated potato

Michael A. Hardigan; F. Parker E. Laimbeer; Linsey Newton; Emily Crisovan; John P. Hamilton; Brieanne Vaillancourt; Krystle Wiegert-Rininger; Joshua C. Wood; David S. Douches; Eva M. Farré; Richard E. Veilleux; C. Robin Buell

Significance Worldwide, potato is the third most important crop grown for direct human consumption, but breeders have struggled to produce new varieties that outperform those released over a century ago, as evidenced by the most widely grown North American cultivar (Russet Burbank) released in 1876. Despite its importance, potato genetic diversity at the whole-genome level remains largely unexplored. Analysis of cultivated potato and its wild relatives using modern genomics approaches can provide insight into the genomic diversity of extant germplasm, reveal historic introgressions and hybridization events, and identify genes targeted during domestication that control variance for agricultural traits, all critical information to address food security in 21st century agriculture. Cultivated potatoes (Solanum tuberosum L.), domesticated from wild Solanum species native to the Andes of southern Peru, possess a diverse gene pool representing more than 100 tuber-bearing relatives (Solanum section Petota). A diversity panel of wild species, landraces, and cultivars was sequenced to assess genetic variation within tuber-bearing Solanum and the impact of domestication on genome diversity and identify key loci selected for cultivation in North and South America. Sequence diversity of diploid and tetraploid S. tuberosum exceeded any crop resequencing study to date, in part due to expanded wild introgressions following polyploidy that captured alleles outside of their geographic origin. We identified 2,622 genes as under selection, with only 14–16% shared by North American and Andean cultivars, showing that a limited gene set drove early improvement of cultivated potato, while adaptation of upland (S. tuberosum group Andigena) and lowland (S. tuberosum groups Chilotanum and Tuberosum) populations targeted distinct loci. Signatures of selection were uncovered in genes controlling carbohydrate metabolism, glycoalkaloid biosynthesis, the shikimate pathway, the cell cycle, and circadian rhythm. Reduced sexual fertility that accompanied the shift to asexual reproduction in cultivars was reflected by signatures of selection in genes regulating pollen development/gametogenesis. Exploration of haplotype diversity at potato’s maturity locus (StCDF1) revealed introgression of truncated alleles from wild species, particularly S. microdontum in long-day–adapted cultivars. This study uncovers a historic role of wild Solanum species in the diversification of long-day–adapted tetraploid potatoes, showing that extant natural populations represent an essential source of untapped adaptive potential.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Haplotype-Phased Synthetic Long Reads from Short-Read Sequencing.

James A. Stapleton; Jeongwoon Kim; John P. Hamilton; Ming Wu; Luiz Irber; Rohan Maddamsetti; Bryan Briney; Linsey Newton; Dennis R. Burton; C. Titus Brown; Christina Chan; C. Robin Buell; Timothy A. Whitehead

Next-generation DNA sequencing has revolutionized the study of biology. However, the short read lengths of the dominant instruments complicate assembly of complex genomes and haplotype phasing of mixtures of similar sequences. Here we demonstrate a method to reconstruct the sequences of individual nucleic acid molecules up to 11.6 kilobases in length from short (150-bp) reads. We show that our method can construct 99.97%-accurate synthetic reads from bacterial, plant, and animal genomic samples, full-length mRNA sequences from human cancer cell lines, and individual HIV env gene variants from a mixture. The preparation of multiple samples can be multiplexed into a single tube, further reducing effort and cost relative to competing approaches. Our approach generates sequencing libraries in three days from less than one microgram of DNA in a single-tube format without custom equipment or specialized expertise.


G3: Genes, Genomes, Genetics | 2014

Prevalence, Evolution, and cis-Regulation of Diel Transcription in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

Nicholas Panchy; Guangxi Wu; Linsey Newton; Chia Hong Tsai; Jin Chen; Christoph Benning; Eva M. Farré; Shin Han Shiu

Endogenous (circadian) and exogenous (e.g., diel) biological rhythms are a prominent feature of many living systems. In green algal species, knowledge of the extent of diel rhythmicity of genome-wide gene expression, its evolution, and its cis-regulatory mechanism is limited. In this study, we identified cyclically expressed genes under diel conditions in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and found that ~50% of the 17,114 annotated genes exhibited cyclic expression. These cyclic expression patterns indicate a clear succession of biological processes during the course of a day. Among 237 functional categories enriched in cyclically expressed genes, >90% were phase-specific, including photosynthesis, cell division, and motility-related processes. By contrasting cyclic expression between C. reinhardtii and Arabidopsis thaliana putative orthologs, we found significant but weak conservation in cyclic gene expression patterns. On the other hand, within C. reinhardtii cyclic expression was preferentially maintained between duplicates, and the evolution of phase between paralogs is limited to relatively minor time shifts. Finally, to better understand the cis regulatory basis of diel expression, putative cis-regulatory elements were identified that could predict the expression phase of a subset of the cyclic transcriptome. Our findings demonstrate both the prevalence of cycling genes as well as the complex regulatory circuitry required to control cyclic expression in a green algal model, highlighting the need to consider diel expression in studying algal molecular networks and in future biotechnological applications.


Molecular Plant | 2018

Phylogenomic Mining of the Mints Reveals Multiple Mechanisms Contributing to the Evolution of Chemical Diversity in Lamiaceae

Benoît Boachon; C. Robin Buell; Emily Crisovan; Natalia Dudareva; Nicolás García; Grant T. Godden; Laura K. Henry; Mohamed O. Kamileen; Heather Rose Kates; Matthew B. Kilgore; Benjamin R. Lichman; Evgeny V. Mavrodiev; Linsey Newton; Carlos Rodriguez-Lopez; Sarah E. O'Connor; Douglas E. Soltis; Pamela S. Soltis; Brieanne Vaillancourt; Krystle Wiegert-Rininger; Dongyan Zhao

The evolution of chemical complexity has been a major driver of plant diversification, with novel compounds serving as key innovations. The species-rich mint family (Lamiaceae) produces an enormous variety of compounds that act as attractants and defense molecules in nature and are used widely by humans as flavor additives, fragrances, and anti-herbivory agents. To elucidate the mechanisms by which such diversity evolved, we combined leaf transcriptome data from 48 Lamiaceae species and four outgroups with a robust phylogeny and chemical analyses of three terpenoid classes (monoterpenes, sesquiterpenes, and iridoids) that share and compete for precursors. Our integrated chemical-genomic-phylogenetic approach revealed that: (1) gene family expansion rather than increased enzyme promiscuity of terpene synthases is correlated with mono- and sesquiterpene diversity; (2) differential expression of core genes within the iridoid biosynthetic pathway is associated with iridoid presence/absence; (3) generally, production of iridoids and canonical monoterpenes appears to be inversely correlated; and (4) iridoid biosynthesis is significantly associated with expression of geraniol synthase, which diverts metabolic flux away from canonical monoterpenes, suggesting that competition for common precursors can be a central control point in specialized metabolism. These results suggest that multiple mechanisms contributed to the evolution of chemodiversity in this economically important family.


ChemBioChem | 2018

Gene discovery in Gelsemium highlights conserved gene clusters in monoterpene indole alkaloid biosynthesis

Jakob Franke; Jeongwoon Kim; John P. Hamilton; Dongyan Zhao; Gina M. Pham; Krystle Wiegert-Rininger; Emily Crisovan; Linsey Newton; Brieanne Vaillancourt; Evangelos C. Tatsis; C. Robin Buell; Sarah E. O'Connor

Genome mining is a routine technique in microbes for discovering biosynthetic pathways. In plants, however, genomic information is not commonly used to identify novel biosynthesis genes. Here, we present the genome of the medicinal plant and oxindole monoterpene indole alkaloid (MIA) producer Gelsemium sempervirens (Gelsemiaceae). A gene cluster from Catharanthus roseus, which is utilized at least six enzymatic steps downstream from the last common intermediate shared between the two plant alkaloid types, is found in G. sempervirens, although the corresponding enzymes act on entirely different substrates. This study provides insights into the common genomic context of MIA pathways and is an important milestone in the further elucidation of the Gelsemium oxindole alkaloid pathway.


New Phytologist | 2005

Virus infection in remnant native bunchgrasses from invaded California grasslands

Carolyn M. Malmstrom; C. C. Hughes; Linsey Newton; C. J. Stoner

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C. Robin Buell

Michigan State University

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Emily Crisovan

Michigan State University

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Eva M. Farré

Michigan State University

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Gina M. Pham

Michigan State University

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Erik S. Runkle

Michigan State University

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Jeongwoon Kim

Michigan State University

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