Mark E. Williams
DuPont
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Publication
Featured researches published by Mark E. Williams.
Nature Genetics | 2008
Peizhong Zheng; William B. Allen; Keith Roesler; Mark E. Williams; Shirong Zhang; Jiming Li; Kimberly Glassman; Jerry Ranch; Douglas Nubel; William Edward Solawetz; Dinakar Bhattramakki; Victor Llaca; Stéphane Deschamps; Gan-Yuan Zhong; Mitchell C. Tarczynski; Bo Shen
Plant oil is an important renewable resource for biodiesel production and for dietary consumption by humans and livestock. Through genetic mapping of the oil trait in plants, studies have reported multiple quantitative trait loci (QTLs) with small effects, but the molecular basis of oil QTLs remains largely unknown. Here we show that a high-oil QTL (qHO6) affecting maize seed oil and oleic-acid contents encodes an acyl-CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT1-2), which catalyzes the final step of oil synthesis. We further show that a phenylalanine insertion in DGAT1-2 at position 469 (F469) is responsible for the increased oil and oleic-acid contents. The DGAT1-2 allele with F469 is ancestral, whereas the allele without F469 is a more recent mutant selected by domestication or breeding. Ectopic expression of the high-oil DGAT1-2 allele increases oil and oleic-acid contents by up to 41% and 107%, respectively. This work provides insights into the molecular basis of natural variation of oil and oleic-acid contents in plants and highlights DGAT as a promising target for increasing oil and oleic-acid contents in other crops.
The Plant Cell | 2003
Kelly Palaisa; Michele Morgante; Mark E. Williams; Antoni Rafalski
We investigated the effects of human selection for yellow endosperm color, representing increased carotenoid content, on two maize genes, the Y1 phytoene synthase and PSY2, a putative second phytoene synthase. Multiple polymorphic sites were identified at Y1 and PSY2 in 75 white and yellow maize inbred lines. Many polymorphic sites showed strong association with the endosperm color phenotype at Y1, but no detectable association was found at PSY2. Nucleotide diversity was equivalent for whites and yellows at PSY2 but was 19-fold less in yellows than in whites at Y1, consistent with the white ancestral state of the gene. The strong sequence haplotype conservation within yellows at Y1 and a significant, negative Tajimas D both verified positive selection for yellow endosperm. We propose that two independent gain-of-function events associated with insertions into the promoter of the Y1 gene and upregulation of expression in endosperm have been incorporated into yellow maize.
Functional & Integrative Genomics | 2002
Jian-Ming Lee; Mark E. Williams; Scott V. Tingey; Antoni Rafalski
We are using DNA microarray-based gene expression profiling to classify temporal patterns of gene expression during the development of maize embryos, to understand mRNA-level control of embryogenesis and to dissect metabolic pathways and their interactions in the maize embryo. Genes involved in carbohydrate, fatty acid, and amino acid metabolism, the tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle, glycolysis, the pentose phosphate pathway, embryogenesis, membrane transport, signal transduction, cofactor biosynthesis, photosynthesis, oxidative phosphorylation and electron transfer, as well as 600 random complementary DNA (cDNA) clones from maize embryos, were arrayed on glass slides. DNA arrays were hybridized with fluorescent dye-labeled cDNA probes synthesized from kernel and embryo poly(A)+RNA from different stages of maize seed development. Several characteristic developmental patterns of expression were identified and correlated with gene function. Patterns of coordinated gene expression in the TCA cycle and glycolysis were analyzed in detail. The steady state level of poly(A)+ RNA for many genes varies dramatically during maize embryo development. Expression patterns of genes coding for enzymes of fatty acid biosynthesis and glycolysis are coordinately regulated during development. Genes of unknown function may by assigned a hypothetical role based on their patterns of expression resembling well characterized genes. Electronic supplementary material to this paper can be obtained by using the Springer LINK server located at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10142-002-0046-6.
Archive | 2007
Thao Dam; Anthony D. Guida; Christine B. Hazel; Bailin Li; Mark E. Williams
Archive | 1999
Sean J. Coughlan; Mark E. Williams
Archive | 2007
William B. Allen; Bo Shen; Mitchell C. Tarczynski; Mark E. Williams; Peizhong Zheng; Gan-Yuan Zhong
Archive | 2006
Joanne E. Barton; William J. Gordon-Kamm; Tanveer Hussain; Sheila E. Maddock; Mark E. Williams; Xinli Wu; Zuo-Yu Zhao
Archive | 1999
Rebecca E. Cahoon; Jennie Bih-Jien Shen; Mark E. Williams
Archive | 2007
Thao Dam; Anthony D. Guida; Christine B. Hazel; Bailin Li; Mark E. Williams
Archive | 2008
Mark E. Williams