Paul St. Amand
United States Department of Agriculture
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Publication
Featured researches published by Paul St. Amand.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Martin Mascher; Shuangye Wu; Paul St. Amand; Nils Stein; Jesse Poland
The rapid development of next-generation sequencing platforms has enabled the use of sequencing for routine genotyping across a range of genetics studies and breeding applications. Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS), a low-cost, reduced representation sequencing method, is becoming a common approach for whole-genome marker profiling in many species. With quickly developing sequencing technologies, adapting current GBS methodologies to new platforms will leverage these advancements for future studies. To test new semiconductor sequencing platforms for GBS, we genotyped a barley recombinant inbred line (RIL) population. Based on a previous GBS approach, we designed bar code and adapter sets for the Ion Torrent platforms. Four sets of 24-plex libraries were constructed consisting of 94 RILs and the two parents and sequenced on two Ion platforms. In parallel, a 96-plex library of the same RILs was sequenced on the Illumina HiSeq 2000. We applied two different computational pipelines to analyze sequencing data; the reference-independent TASSEL pipeline and a reference-based pipeline using SAMtools. Sequence contigs positioned on the integrated physical and genetic map were used for read mapping and variant calling. We found high agreement in genotype calls between the different platforms and high concordance between genetic and reference-based marker order. There was, however, paucity in the number of SNP that were jointly discovered by the different pipelines indicating a strong effect of alignment and filtering parameters on SNP discovery. We show the utility of the current barley genome assembly as a framework for developing very low-cost genetic maps, facilitating high resolution genetic mapping and negating the need for developing de novo genetic maps for future studies in barley. Through demonstration of GBS on semiconductor sequencing platforms, we conclude that the GBS approach is amenable to a range of platforms and can easily be modified as new sequencing technologies, analysis tools and genomic resources develop.
Molecular Ecology | 2010
Jennifer L. Apple; Tony Grace; Anthony Joern; Paul St. Amand; Samantha M. Wisely
In this study, we used a comparative genome scan to examine patterns of population differentiation with respect to host plant use in Hesperotettix viridis, a Nearctic oligophagous grasshopper locally specialized on various Asteraceae including Solidago, Gutierrezia, and Ericameria. We identified amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) loci with significantly elevated FST (outlier loci) in multiple different‐host and same‐host comparisons of populations while controlling for geographic distance. By comparing the number and identities of outlier loci in different‐host vs. same‐host comparisons, we found evidence of host plant‐related divergent selection for some population comparisons (Solidago‐ vs. Gutierrezia‐feeders), while other comparisons (Ericameria‐ vs. Gutierrezia‐feeders) failed to demonstrate a strong role for host association in population differentiation. In comparisons of Solidago‐ vs. Gutierrezia‐feeding populations, a relatively high number of outlier loci observed repeatedly in different‐host comparisons (35% of all outliers and 2.7% of all 625 AFLP loci) indicated a significant role for host‐related selection in contributing to overall genomic differentiation in this grasshopper. Mitochondrial DNA sequence data revealed a star‐shaped phylogeny with no host‐ or geography‐related structure, low nucleotide diversity, and high haplotype diversity, suggesting a recent population expansion. mtDNA data do not suggest a long period of isolation in separate glacial refugia but are instead more compatible with a single glacial refugium and more recent divergence in host use. Our study adds to research documenting heterogeneity in differentiation across the genome as a consequence of divergent natural selection, a phenomenon that may occur as part of the process of ecological speciation.
Journal of Economic Entomology | 2005
Nandi Nagaraj; John C. Reese; Mitchell R. Tuinstra; C. Michael Smith; Paul St. Amand; M. B. Kirkham; K. D. Kofoid; Leslie R. Campbell; Gerald E. Wilde
Crop Science | 2012
Huangjun Lu; Rebecca A. Kottke; Ravindra N. Devkota; Paul St. Amand; Amy Bernardo; Guihua Bai; Patrick F. Byrne; T. J. Martin; Scott D. Haley; Jackie C. Rudd
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011
Stephen R. Delwiche; Robert A. Graybosch; Paul St. Amand; Guihua Bai
Plant Science | 2006
Daolin Fu; Paul St. Amand; Yanmei Xiao; Subbaratnam Muthukrishnan; G. H. Liang
PLOS ONE | 2015
Amy Bernardo; Shan Wang; Paul St. Amand; Guihua Bai
Journal of Plant Registrations | 2014
Robert A. Graybosch; P. S. Baenziger; Dipak K. Santra; Teshome Regassa; Yue Jin; J. A. Kolmer; Stephen N. Wegulo; Guihua Bai; Paul St. Amand; Xianming Chen; B. Seabourn; F. Dowell; R. Bowden; D.M. Marshall
Journal of Plant Registrations | 2015
Amir M. H. Ibrahim; J. C. Rudd; Ravindra N. Devkota; Jason Baker; Russell Sutton; Bryan Simoneaux; Geraldine Opeña; Rex Herrington; Lloyd W. Rooney; Linda Dykes; Joseph M. Awika; L. R. Nelson; Allan K. Fritz; Robert L. Bowden; Robert A. Graybosch; Yue Jin; Bradford W. Seabourn; Xianming Chen; J. A. Kolmer; Paul St. Amand; Guihua Bai; Robert W. Duncan
Crop Science | 2018
Jorge P. Venegas; Robert A. Graybosch; Brian J. Wienhold; Devin J. Rose; Brian M. Waters; P. Stephen Baenziger; Kent M. Eskridge; Guihua Bai; Paul St. Amand