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Dive into the research topics where Pablo D. Rabinowicz is active.

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Featured researches published by Pablo D. Rabinowicz.


PLOS Biology | 2007

Epigenetic natural variation in Arabidopsis thaliana

Matthew W. Vaughn; Miloš Tanurdžić; Zachary Lippman; Hongmei Jiang; Robert Carrasquillo; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Neilay Dedhia; W. Richard McCombie; Nicolas Agier; Agnès Bulski; Vincent Colot; R. W. Doerge; Robert A. Martienssen

Cytosine methylation of repetitive sequences is widespread in plant genomes, occurring in both symmetric (CpG and CpNpG) as well as asymmetric sequence contexts. We used the methylation-dependent restriction enzyme McrBC to profile methylated DNA using tiling microarrays of Arabidopsis Chromosome 4 in two distinct ecotypes, Columbia and Landsberg erecta. We also used comparative genome hybridization to profile copy number polymorphisms. Repeated sequences and transposable elements (TEs), especially long terminal repeat retrotransposons, are densely methylated, but one third of genes also have low but detectable methylation in their transcribed regions. While TEs are almost always methylated, genic methylation is highly polymorphic, with half of all methylated genes being methylated in only one of the two ecotypes. A survey of loci in 96 Arabidopsis accessions revealed a similar degree of methylation polymorphism. Within-gene methylation is heritable, but is lost at a high frequency in segregating F 2 families. Promoter methylation is rare, and gene expression is not generally affected by differences in DNA methylation. Small interfering RNA are preferentially associated with methylated TEs, but not with methylated genes, indicating that most genic methylation is not guided by small interfering RNA. This may account for the instability of gene methylation, if occasional failure of maintenance methylation cannot be restored by other means.


Nature Biotechnology | 2010

Draft genome sequence of the oilseed species Ricinus communis

Agnes P. Chan; Jonathan Crabtree; Qi Zhao; Hernan Lorenzi; Joshua Orvis; Daniela Puiu; Admasu Melake-Berhan; Kristine M Jones; Julia C. Redman; Grace Q. Chen; Edgar B. Cahoon; Melaku Gedil; Mario Stanke; Brian J. Haas; Jennifer R. Wortman; Claire M. Fraser-Liggett; Jacques Ravel; Pablo D. Rabinowicz

Castor bean (Ricinus communis) is an oilseed crop that belongs to the spurge (Euphorbiaceae) family, which comprises ∼6,300 species that include cassava (Manihot esculenta), rubber tree (Hevea brasiliensis) and physic nut (Jatropha curcas). It is primarily of economic interest as a source of castor oil, used for the production of high-quality lubricants because of its high proportion of the unusual fatty acid ricinoleic acid. However, castor bean genomics is also relevant to biosecurity as the seeds contain high levels of ricin, a highly toxic, ribosome-inactivating protein. Here we report the draft genome sequence of castor bean (4.6-fold coverage), the first for a member of the Euphorbiaceae. Whereas most of the key genes involved in oil synthesis and turnover are single copy, the number of members of the ricin gene family is larger than previously thought. Comparative genomics analysis suggests the presence of an ancient hexaploidization event that is conserved across the dicotyledonous lineage.Castor bean (Ricinus communis) is an oil crop that belongs to the spurge (Euphorbiaceae) family. Its seeds are the source of castor oil, used for the production of high-quality lubricants due to its high proportion of the unusual fatty acid ricinoleic acid. Castor bean seeds also produce ricin, a highly toxic ribosome inactivating protein, making castor bean relevant for biosafety. We report here the 4.6X draft genome sequence of castor bean, representing the first reported Euphorbiaceae genome sequence. Our analysis shows that most key castor oil metabolism genes are single-copy while the ricin gene family is larger than previously thought. Comparative genomics analysis suggests the presence of an ancient hexaploidization event that is conserved across the dicotyledonous lineage.


BMC Genomics | 2008

Genome sequence and rapid evolution of the rice pathogen Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae PXO99A

Daniel D. Sommer; Michael C. Schatz; Adam M. Phillippy; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Seiji Tsuge; Ayako Furutani; Hirokazu Ochiai; Arthur L. Delcher; David R. Kelley; Ramana Madupu; Daniela Puiu; Diana Radune; Martin Shumway; Cole Trapnell; Gudlur Aparna; Gopaljee Jha; Alok K. Pandey; Prabhu B. Patil; Hiromichi Ishihara; Damien Meyer; Boris Szurek; Valérie Verdier; Ralf Koebnik; J. Maxwell Dow; Robert P. Ryan; Hisae Hirata; Shinji Tsuyumu; Sang Won Lee; Pamela C. Ronald; Ramesh V. Sonti

Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae causes bacterial blight of rice (Oryza sativa L.), a major disease that constrains production of this staple crop in many parts of the world. We report here on the complete genome sequence of strain PXO99A and its comparison to two previously sequenced strains, KACC10331 and MAFF311018, which are highly similar to one another. The PXO99A genome is a single circular chromosome of 5,240,075 bp, considerably longer than the genomes of the other strains (4,941,439 bp and 4,940,217 bp, respectively), and it contains 5083 protein-coding genes, including 87 not found in KACC10331 or MAFF311018. PXO99A contains a greater number of virulence-associated transcription activator-like effector genes and has at least ten major chromosomal rearrangements relative to KACC10331 and MAFF311018. PXO99A contains numerous copies of diverse insertion sequence elements, members of which are associated with 7 out of 10 of the major rearrangements. A rapidly-evolving CRISPR (clustered regularly interspersed short palindromic repeats) region contains evidence of dozens of phage infections unique to the PXO99A lineage. PXO99A also contains a unique, near-perfect tandem repeat of 212 kilobases close to the replication terminus. Our results provide striking evidence of genome plasticity and rapid evolution within Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae. The comparisons point to sources of genomic variation and candidates for strain-specific adaptations of this pathogen that help to explain the extraordinary diversity of Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae genotypes and races that have been isolated from around the world.


Nature Genetics | 1999

Differential methylation of genes and retrotransposons facilitates shotgun sequencing of the maize genome.

Pablo D. Rabinowicz; K. Schutz; Neilay Dedhia; C. Yordan; Laurence D. Parnell; Lincoln Stein; W. R. McCombie; Robert A. Martienssen

The genomes of higher plants and animals are highly differentiated, and are composed of a relatively small number of genes and a large fraction of repetitive DNA. The bulk of this repetitive DNA constitutes transposable, and especially retrotransposable, elements. It has been hypothesized that most of these elements are heavily methylated relative to genes, but the evidence for this is controversial. We show here that repeat sequences in maize are largely excluded from genomic shotgun libraries by the selection of an appropriate host strain because of their sensitivity to bacterial restriction-modification systems. In contrast, unmethylated genic regions are preserved in these genetically filtered libraries if the insert size is less than the average size of genes. The representation of unique maize sequences not found in plant reference genomes is also greatly enriched. This demonstrates that repeats, and not genes, are the primary targets of methylation in maize. The use of restrictive libraries in genome shotgun sequencing in plant genomes should allow significant representation of genes, reducing the number of reactions required.


Plant Physiology | 2007

Toward Sequencing Cotton (Gossypium) Genomes

Z. Jeffrey Chen; Brian E. Scheffler; Elizabeth S. Dennis; Barbara A. Triplett; Tianzhen Zhang; Wangzhen Guo; Xiao-Ya Chen; David M. Stelly; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Christopher D. Town; Tony Arioli; Curt L. Brubaker; Roy G. Cantrell; Jean Marc Lacape; Mauricio Ulloa; Peng Chee; Alan R. Gingle; Candace H. Haigler; Richard G. Percy; Sukumar Saha; Thea A. Wilkins; Robert J. Wright; Allen Van Deynze; Yuxian Zhu; Shuxun Yu; Ibrokhim Y. Abdurakhmonov; Ishwarappa S. Katageri; P. Ananda Kumar; Mehboob-ur-Rahman; Yusuf Zafar

Despite rapidly decreasing costs and innovative technologies, sequencing of angiosperm genomes is not yet undertaken lightly. Generating larger amounts of sequence data more quickly does not address the difficulties of sequencing and assembling complex genomes de novo. The cotton ( Gossypium spp.)


Nucleic Acids Research | 2007

The TIGR Plant Transcript Assemblies database

Kevin L. Childs; John P. Hamilton; Wei Zhu; Eugene Ly; Foo Cheung; Hank Wu; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Christopher D. Town; C. Robin Buell; Agnes P. Chan

The TIGR Plant Transcript Assemblies (TA) database () uses expressed sequences collected from the NCBI GenBank Nucleotide database for the construction of transcript assemblies. The sequences collected include expressed sequence tags (ESTs) and full-length and partial cDNAs, but exclude computationally predicted gene sequences. The TA database includes all plant species for which more than 1000 EST or cDNA sequences are publicly available. The EST and cDNA sequences are first clustered based on an all-versus-all pairwise sequence comparison, followed by the generation of consensus sequences (TAs) from individual clusters. The clustering and assembly procedures use the TGICL tool, Megablast and the CAP3 assembler. The UniProt Reference Clusters (UniRef100) protein database is used as the reference database for the functional annotation of the assemblies. The transcription orientation of each TA is determined based on the orientation of the alignment with the best protein hit. The TA sequences and annotation are available via web interfaces and FTP downloads. Assemblies can be retrieved by a text-based keyword search or a sequence-based BLAST search. The current version of the TA database is Release 2 (July 17, 2006) and includes a total of 215 plant species.


PLOS Biology | 2005

Sorghum genome sequencing by methylation filtration.

Joseph A. Bedell; Muhammad A. Budiman; Andrew Nunberg; Robert W. Citek; Dan Robbins; Joshua Jones; Elizabeth Flick; Theresa Rohlfing; Jason Alan Fries; Kourtney Bradford; Jennifer McMenamy; Michael L. Smith; Heather Holeman; Bruce A. Roe; Graham B. Wiley; Ian Korf; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Nathan Lakey; W. Richard McCombie; Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh; Robert A. Martienssen

Sorghum bicolor is a close relative of maize and is a staple crop in Africa and much of the developing world because of its superior tolerance of arid growth conditions. We have generated sequence from the hypomethylated portion of the sorghum genome by applying methylation filtration (MF) technology. The evidence suggests that 96% of the genes have been sequence tagged, with an average coverage of 65% across their length. Remarkably, this level of gene discovery was accomplished after generating a raw coverage of less than 300 megabases of the 735-megabase genome. MF preferentially captures exons and introns, promoters, microRNAs, and simple sequence repeats, and minimizes interspersed repeats, thus providing a robust view of the functional parts of the genome. The sorghum MF sequence set is beneficial to research on sorghum and is also a powerful resource for comparative genomics among the grasses and across the entire plant kingdom. Thousands of hypothetical gene predictions in rice and Arabidopsis are supported by the sorghum dataset, and genomic similarities highlight evolutionarily conserved regions that will lead to a better understanding of rice and Arabidopsis.


Tropical Plant Biology | 2012

The Cassava Genome: Current Progress, Future Directions

Simon Prochnik; Pradeep Reddy Marri; Brian Desany; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Chinnappa D. Kodira; Mohammed Mohiuddin; Fausto J. Rodriguez; Claude M. Fauquet; Joseph M. Tohme; Timothy T. Harkins; Daniel S. Rokhsar; Steve Rounsley

The starchy swollen roots of cassava provide an essential food source for nearly a billion people, as well as possibilities for bioenergy, yet improvements to nutritional content and resistance to threatening diseases are currently impeded. A 454-based whole genome shotgun sequence has been assembled, which covers 69% of the predicted genome size and 96% of protein-coding gene space, with genome finishing underway. The predicted 30,666 genes and 3,485 alternate splice forms are supported by 1.4 M expressed sequence tags (ESTs). Maps based on simple sequence repeat (SSR)-, and EST-derived single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) already exist. Thanks to the genome sequence, a high-density linkage map is currently being developed from a cross between two diverse cassava cultivars: one susceptible to cassava brown streak disease; the other resistant. An efficient genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) approach is being developed to catalog SNPs both within the mapping population and among diverse African farmer-preferred varieties of cassava. These resources will accelerate marker-assisted breeding programs, allowing improvements in disease-resistance and nutrition, and will help us understand the genetic basis for disease resistance.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2011

Two New Complete Genome Sequences Offer Insight into Host and Tissue Specificity of Plant Pathogenic Xanthomonas spp.

Adam J. Bogdanove; Ralf Koebnik; Hong Lu; Ayako Furutani; Samuel V. Angiuoli; Prabhu B. Patil; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Robert P. Ryan; Damien Meyer; Sang-Wook Han; Gudlur Aparna; Misha Rajaram; Arthur L. Delcher; Adam M. Phillippy; Daniela Puiu; Michael C. Schatz; Martin Shumway; Daniel D. Sommer; Cole Trapnell; Faiza Benahmed; George Dimitrov; Ramana Madupu; Diana Radune; Steven A. Sullivan; Gopaljee Jha; Hiromichi Ishihara; Sang Won Lee; Alok K. Pandey; Vikas Sharma; Malinee Sriariyanun

Xanthomonas is a large genus of bacteria that collectively cause disease on more than 300 plant species. The broad host range of the genus contrasts with stringent host and tissue specificity for individual species and pathovars. Whole-genome sequences of Xanthomonas campestris pv. raphani strain 756C and X. oryzae pv. oryzicola strain BLS256, pathogens that infect the mesophyll tissue of the leading models for plant biology, Arabidopsis thaliana and rice, respectively, were determined and provided insight into the genetic determinants of host and tissue specificity. Comparisons were made with genomes of closely related strains that infect the vascular tissue of the same hosts and across a larger collection of complete Xanthomonas genomes. The results suggest a model in which complex sets of adaptations at the level of gene content account for host specificity and subtler adaptations at the level of amino acid or noncoding regulatory nucleotide sequence determine tissue specificity.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2003

Maize-targeted mutagenesis: A knockout resource for maize

Bruce May; Hong Liu; Erik Vollbrecht; Lynn Senior; Pablo D. Rabinowicz; Donna Roh; Xiaokang Pan; Lincoln Stein; Michael Freeling; Danny Alexander; Robert A. Martienssen

We describe an efficient system for site-selected transposon mutagenesis in maize. A total of 43,776 F1 plants were generated by using Robertsons Mutator (Mu) pollen parents and self-pollinated to establish a library of transposon-mutagenized seed. The frequency of new seed mutants was between 10–4 and 10–5 per F1 plant. As a service to the maize community, maize-targeted mutagenesis selects insertions in genes of interest from this library by using the PCR. Pedigree, knockout, sequence, phenotype, and other information is stored in a powerful interactive database (maize-targeted mutagenesis database) that enables analysis of the entire population and the handling of knockout requests. By inhibiting Mu activity in most F1 plants, we sought to reduce somatic insertions that may cause false positives selected from pooled tissue. By monitoring the remaining Mu activity in the F2, however, we demonstrate that seed phenotypes depend on it, and false positives occur in lines that appear to lack it. We conclude that more than half of all mutations arising in this population are suppressed on losing Mu activity. These results have implications for epigenetic models of inbreeding and for functional genomics.

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Agnes P. Chan

J. Craig Venter Institute

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Robert A. Martienssen

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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W. Richard McCombie

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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Chris Bowler

École Normale Supérieure

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Prabhu B. Patil

Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology

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A. O'Shaughnessy

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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