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Dive into the research topics where Richard A. Jorgensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Richard A. Jorgensen.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2007

The tiny eukaryote Ostreococcus provides genomic insights into the paradox of plankton speciation

Brian Palenik; Jane Grimwood; Andrea Aerts; Asaf Salamov; Nicholas H. Putnam; Chris L. Dupont; Richard A. Jorgensen; Stephane Rombauts; Kemin Zhou; Robert Otillar; Sabeeha S. Merchant; Terry Gaasterland; Carolyn A. Napoli; Karla Gendler; Olivier Vallon; Marc Heijde; Kamel Jabbari; Chris Bowler; Steven Robbens; Gregory Werner; Inna Dubchak; Gregory J. Pazour; Ian T. Paulsen; Jeremy Schmutz; Daniel S. Rokhsar; Yves Van de Peer; Igor V. Grigoriev

The smallest known eukaryotes, at ≈1-μm diameter, are Ostreococcus tauri and related species of marine phytoplankton. The genome of Ostreococcus lucimarinus has been completed and compared with that of O. tauri. This comparison reveals surprising differences across orthologous chromosomes in the two species from highly syntenic chromosomes in most cases to chromosomes with almost no similarity. Species divergence in these phytoplankton is occurring through multiple mechanisms acting differently on different chromosomes and likely including acquisition of new genes through horizontal gene transfer. We speculate that this latter process may be involved in altering the cell-surface characteristics of each species. In addition, the genome of O. lucimarinus provides insights into the unique metal metabolism of these organisms, which are predicted to have a large number of selenocysteine-containing proteins. Selenoenzymes are more catalytically active than similar enzymes lacking selenium, and thus the cell may require less of that protein. As reported here, selenoenzymes, novel fusion proteins, and loss of some major protein families including ones associated with chromatin are likely important adaptations for achieving a small cell size.


The Plant Cell | 2007

FLOWERING LOCUS T Protein May Act as the Long-Distance Florigenic Signal in the Cucurbits

Ming-Kuem Lin; Helene Belanger; Young Jin Lee; Erika Varkonyi-Gasic; Ken Ichiro Taoka; Eriko Miura; Beatriz Xoconostle-Cázares; Karla Gendler; Richard A. Jorgensen; Brett S. Phinney; Tony James Lough; William J. Lucas

Cucurbita moschata, a cucurbit species responsive to inductive short-day (SD) photoperiods, and Zucchini yellow mosaic virus (ZYMV) were used to test whether long-distance movement of FLOWERING LOCUS T (FT) mRNA or FT is required for floral induction. Ectopic expression of FT by ZYMV was highly effective in mediating floral induction of long-day (LD)–treated plants. Moreover, the infection zone of ZYMV was far removed from floral meristems, suggesting that FT transcripts do not function as the florigenic signal in this system. Heterografting demonstrated efficient transmission of a florigenic signal from flowering Cucurbita maxima stocks to LD-grown C. moschata scions. Real-time RT-PCR performed on phloem sap collected from C. maxima stocks detected no FT transcripts, whereas mass spectrometry of phloem sap proteins revealed the presence of Cm-FTL1 and Cm-FTL2. Importantly, studies on LD- and SD-treated C. moschata plants established that Cmo-FTL1 and Cmo-FTL2 are regulated by photoperiod at the level of movement into the phloem and not by transcription. Finally, mass spectrometry of florally induced heterografted C. moschata scions revealed that C. maxima FT, but not FT mRNA, crossed the graft union in the phloem translocation stream. Collectively, these studies are consistent with FT functioning as a component of the florigenic signaling system in the cucurbits.


FEBS Letters | 2004

Effectiveness of RNA interference in transgenic plants

Arthur Kerschen; Carolyn A. Napoli; Richard A. Jorgensen; Andreas E. Müller

RNA interference (RNAi) can be used to study gene function by effecting degradation of the targeted transcript. However, the effectiveness of transgene‐induced RNAi among multiple target genes has not been compared systematically. To this end, we developed a relative quantitative RT‐PCR protocol that allows use of a single internal standard over a wide range of target gene expression levels. Using this method in an analysis of transgenic Arabidopsis thaliana RNAi lines targeting 25 different endogenes revealed that independent, homozygous, single‐copy (sc) T4 lines targeting the same gene generally reduce transcript levels to the same extent, whereas multi‐copy RNAi lines differed in the degree of target reduction and never exceeded the effect of sc transgenes. The maximal reduction of target transcript levels varied among targets. These observations suggest that each target sequence possesses an inherent degree of susceptibility to dsRNA‐mediated degradation.


BMC Biology | 2007

Identification of novel conserved peptide uORF homology groups in Arabidopsis and rice reveals ancient eukaryotic origin of select groups and preferential association with transcription factor-encoding genes

Celine A. Hayden; Richard A. Jorgensen

BackgroundUpstream open reading frames (uORFs) can mediate translational control over the largest, or major ORF (mORF) in response to starvation, polyamine concentrations, and sucrose concentrations. One plant uORF with conserved peptide sequences has been shown to exert this control in an amino acid sequence-dependent manner but generally it is not clear what kinds of genes are regulated, or how extensively this mechanism is invoked in a given genome.ResultsBy comparing full-length cDNA sequences from Arabidopsis and rice we identified 26 distinct homology groups of conserved peptide uORFs, only three of which have been reported previously. Pairwise Ka/Ksanalysis showed that purifying selection had acted on nearly all conserved peptide uORFs and their associated mORFs. Functions of predicted mORF proteins could be inferred for 16 homology groups and many of these proteins appear to have a regulatory function, including 6 transcription factors, 5 signal transduction factors, 3 developmental signal molecules, a homolog of translation initiation factor eIF5, and a RING finger protein. Transcription factors are clearly overrepresented in this data set when compared to the frequency calculated for the entire genome (p = 1.2 × 10-7). Duplicate gene pairs arising from a whole genome duplication (ohnologs) with a conserved uORF are much more likely to have been retained in Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) than are ohnologs of other genes (39% vs 14% of ancestral genes, p = 5 × 10-3). Two uORF groups were found in animals, indicating an ancient origin of these putative regulatory elements.ConclusionConservation of uORF amino acid sequence, association with homologous mORFs over long evolutionary time periods, preferential retention after whole genome duplications, and preferential association with mORFs coding for transcription factors suggest that the conserved peptide uORFs identified in this study are strong candidates for translational controllers of regulatory genes.


Developmental Genetics | 1998

Homology-based control of gene expression patterns in transgenic petunia flowers

Qiudeng Que; Richard A. Jorgensen

Plant transgenes may participate in two types of homology-based gene silencing. One requires transcript homology, is post-transcriptional, and is referred to as cosuppression; the other requires promoter homology, is transcriptional, and is similar to paramutation. This paper uses flower color transgenes to address the hierarchical operation of both mechanisms in plants carrying two transgene copies. It is shown that cosuppression of homologous, endogenous flower color genes by single-copy transgenes requires that the transgene be driven by a strong promoter and that the degree of cosuppression is highly sensitive to increasing transgene dosage. Together, these observations suggest that cosuppression should be a sensitive reporter of epigenetic changes in transgene transcription, such as might be caused by paramutation-like interactions between transgene loci. Intercrosses bringing together two homologous transgene loci, one a known epimutable reporter and the other a transgene inverted repeat, result in complete loss of cosuppression in some outcross progeny and a qualitative change in morphology-based patterns of cosuppression in other outcross progeny. This paramutation-like behavior suggests that the transgenes may be altered at the transcriptional level, eliminating cosuppression altogether or changing the spatial pattern of transgene transcription to produce a new pattern of cosuppression.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2002

RNA traffics information systemically in plants

Richard A. Jorgensen

A new paradigm for intercellular signaling in vascular plants is emerging that offers to revolutionize our understanding of these deceptively simple organisms and reveal the true level of their sophistication in information processing. The new conceptual understanding is based on directed trafficking of information-rich macromolecular signals (transcription factors and RNA molecules) between cells and systemically throughout the plant (for review, see ref. 1). Intercellular and systemic movement occurs via two specialized structures: (i) intercellular organelles known as plasmodesmata, which provide continuity of cytoplasm and endoplasmic reticulum between adjacent cells; and (ii) the phloem, which is responsible for translocation of photoassimilates from source leaves to sink tissues and, together with the xylem, forms the vascular system of higher plants. siRNAs can trigger RNA silencing in plants, just as in animals.


Plant Cell Reports | 2007

Microhomologies between T-DNA ends and target sites often occur in inverted orientation and may be responsible for the high frequency of T-DNA-associated inversions

Andreas E. Müller; Ross G. Atkinson; Robert B. Sandoval; Richard A. Jorgensen

Sequence analysis of left and right border integration sites of independent, single-copy T-DNA inserts in Arabidopsis thaliana revealed three previously unrecognized concomitants of T-DNA integration. First, genomic pre-insertion sites shared sequence similarity not only with the T-DNA left and right border regions, as was previously reported, but also at high frequency with the inverted complement of the T-DNA right border region. Second, palindromic sequences were frequently found to overlap or lie adjacent to genomic target sites, suggesting a high recombinogenic potential for palindromic elements during T-DNA integration and a possible role during the primary contact between the T-DNA and the target DNA. Third, “filler” DNA sequences between genomic pre-insertion site DNA and T-DNA often derive from sequences in the T-DNA left and right border regions that are clustered around palindromic sequences in these T-DNA regions, suggesting that these palindromic elements are “hot spots” for filler DNA formation. The discovery of inverted sequence similarities at the right border suggests a previously unrecognized mode of T-DNA integration that involves heteroduplex formation at both T-DNA borders and with opposite strands of the target DNA. Scanning for sequence similarities in both direct and inverted orientation may increase the probability and/or effectiveness of anchoring the T-DNA to the target DNA. Variations on this scheme may also account for inversion events at the target site of T-DNA integration and inverted T-DNA repeat formation, common sequence organization patterns associated with T-DNA integration.


Plant Journal | 2010

Targeted forward mutagenesis by transitive RNAi

Katherine Petsch; Chonglie Ma; Michael J. Scanlon; Richard A. Jorgensen

A novel technique is described that targets specific populations of transcripts for homology-based gene silencing using transitive RNAi. This approach is designed to target a subset of the transcriptome in order to identify genes involved in a particular localized process, such as photosynthesis. As a proof-of-concept approach, mesophyll cells from Arabidopsis thaliana were laser-microdissected from whole leaves to generate a focused cDNA library that was bi-directionally cloned into a transitive RNAi vector that had been designed to induce silencing of homologous, endogenous genes. Approximately 15% of the transformant plants identified from both sense and antisense libraries exhibited visible phenotypes indicative of photosynthetic defects. Amplification from the genome and sequencing of cDNA inserts identified candidate genes underlying the phenotypes. For 10 of 11 such mutants, re-transformation with an RNAi construct corresponding to the candidate gene recapitulated the original mutant phenotype, and reduction of corresponding endogene transcripts was confirmed. In addition, one of the re-transformed transgenes also silenced transcripts of closely related family members, thereby demonstrating the utility of this approach for mutagenesis of redundant gene functions. Preliminary results using tissue-specific transitive RNAi forward mutagenesis of the Arabidopsis vegetative shoot apical meristem demonstrate the broad applicability of this forward mutagenesis technique for a variety of plant cell types.


The Plant Cell | 2004

Sequencing Maize: Just Sample the Salsa or Go for the Whole Enchilada?

Richard A. Jorgensen

With the complete sequence of the rice nuclear genome nearing completion, plant biologists have begun to wonder, discuss, and debate what genome is our next, best target? Although it is easy to list many worthwhile candidates among the angiosperms, the clear favorite for the next complete genome


Bioinformatics | 2005

Evaluating and improving cDNA sequence quality with cQC

Celine A. Hayden; Travis J. Wheeler; Richard A. Jorgensen

SUMMARY Errors are prevalent in cDNA sequences but the extent to which sequence collections differ in frequencies and types of errors has not been investigated systematically. cDNA quality control, or cQC, was developed to evaluate the quality of cDNA sequence collections and to revise those sequences that differ from a higher quality genomic sequence. After removing rRNA, vector, bacterial insertion sequence and chimeric cDNA contaminants, small-scale nucleotide discrepancies were found in 51% of cDNA sequences from one Arabidopsis cDNA collection, 89% from a second Arabidopsis collection and 75% from a rice collection. These errors created premature termination codons in 4 and 42% of cDNA sequences in the respective Arabidopsis collections and in 7% of the rice cDNA sequences.

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Qiudeng Que

University of California

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Asaf Salamov

United States Department of Energy

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Igor V. Grigoriev

United States Department of Energy

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