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Dive into the research topics where Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton is active.

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Featured researches published by Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton.


Nature | 2013

Agriculture: Feeding the future

Susan R. McCouch; Gregory J. Baute; James Bradeen; Paula J. Bramel; Edward S. Buckler; John M. Burke; David Charest; Sylvie Cloutier; Glenn Cole; Hannes Dempewolf; Michael Dingkuhn; Catherine Feuillet; Paul Gepts; Dario Grattapaglia; Luigi Guarino; Scott A. Jackson; Sandra Knapp; Peter Langridge; Amy Lawton-Rauh; Qui Lijua; Charlotte Lusty; Todd P. Michael; Sean Myles; Ken Naito; Randall L. Nelson; Reno Pontarollo; Christopher M. Richards; Loren H. Rieseberg; Jeffrey Ross-Ibarra; Steve Rounsley

Humanity depends on fewer than a dozen of the approximately 300,000 species of flowering plants for 80% of its caloric intake. And we capitalize on only a fraction of the genetic diversity that resides within each of these species. This is not enough to support our food system in the future. Food availability must double in the next 25 years to keep pace with population and income growth around the world. Already, food-production systems are precarious in the face of intensifying demand, climate change, soil degradation and water and land shortages. Farmers have saved the seeds of hundreds of crop species and hundreds of thousands of ‘primitive’ varieties (local domesticates called landraces), as well as the wild relatives of crop species and modern varieties no longer in use. These are stored in more than 1,700 gene banks worldwide. Maintaining the 11 international gene-bank collections alone costs about US


Nucleic Acids Research | 2015

SNP-Seek database of SNPs derived from 3000 rice genomes.

Nickolai Alexandrov; Shuaishuai Tai; Wensheng Wang; Locedie Mansueto; Kevin Palis; Roven Rommel Fuentes; Victor Jun Ulat; Dmytro Chebotarov; Gengyun Zhang; Zhikang Li; Ramil Mauleon; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton; Kenneth L. McNally

18 million a year.


Rice | 2015

Allele mining and enhanced genetic recombination for rice breeding

Hei Leung; Chitra Raghavan; Bo Zhou; Ricardo Oliva; Il Ryong Choi; Vanica Lacorte; Mona Liza Jubay; Casiana Vera Cruz; Glenn B. Gregorio; Rakesh Kumar Singh; Victor Jun Ulat; Frances Nikki Borja; Ramil Mauleon; Nickolai Alexandrov; Kenneth L. McNally; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton

We have identified about 20 million rice SNPs by aligning reads from the 3000 rice genomes project with the Nipponbare genome. The SNPs and allele information are organized into a SNP-Seek system (http://www.oryzasnp.org/iric-portal/), which consists of Oracle database having a total number of rows with SNP genotypes close to 60 billion (20 M SNPs × 3 K rice lines) and web interface for convenient querying. The database allows quick retrieving of SNP alleles for all varieties in a given genome region, finding different alleles from predefined varieties and querying basic passport and morphological phenotypic information about sequenced rice lines. SNPs can be visualized together with the gene structures in JBrowse genome browser. Evolutionary relationships between rice varieties can be explored using phylogenetic trees or multidimensional scaling plots.


Nature | 2018

Genomic variation in 3,010 diverse accessions of Asian cultivated rice

W.Y. Wang; Ramil Mauleon; Zhiqiang Hu; Dmytro Chebotarov; Shuaishuai Tai; Zhichao Wu; Min Li; Tianqing Zheng; Roven Rommel Fuentes; Fan Zhang; Locedie Mansueto; Dario Copetti; Millicent Sanciangco; Kevin Palis; Jianlong Xu; Chen Sun; Binying Fu; Hongliang Zhang; Yongming Gao; Xiuqin Zhao; Fei Shen; Xiao Cui; Hong Yu; Zichao Li; Miaolin Chen; Jeffrey Detras; Yongli Zhou; Xinyuan Zhang; Yue Zhao; Dave Kudrna

Traditional rice varieties harbour a large store of genetic diversity with potential to accelerate rice improvement. For a long time, this diversity maintained in the International Rice Genebank has not been fully used because of a lack of genome information. The publication of the first reference genome of Nipponbare by the International Rice Genome Sequencing Project (IRGSP) marked the beginning of a systematic exploration and use of rice diversity for genetic research and breeding. Since then, the Nipponbare genome has served as the reference for the assembly of many additional genomes. The recently completed 3000 Rice Genomes Project together with the public database (SNP-Seek) provides a new genomic and data resource that enables the identification of useful accessions for breeding. Using disease resistance traits as case studies, we demonstrated the power of allele mining in the 3,000 genomes for extracting accessions from the GeneBank for targeted phenotyping. Although potentially useful landraces can now be identified, their use in breeding is often hindered by unfavourable linkages. Efficient breeding designs are much needed to transfer the useful diversity to breeding. Multi-parent Advanced Generation InterCross (MAGIC) is a breeding design to produce highly recombined populations. The MAGIC approach can be used to generate pre-breeding populations with increased genotypic diversity and reduced linkage drag. Allele mining combined with a multi-parent breeding design can help convert useful diversity into breeding-ready genetic resources.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2017

Rice SNP-seek database update: new SNPs, indels, and queries

Locedie Mansueto; Roven Rommel Fuentes; Frances Nikki Borja; Jeffery Detras; Juan Miguel Abriol-Santos; Dmytro Chebotarov; Millicent Sanciangco; Kevin Palis; Dario Copetti; Alexandre Poliakov; Inna Dubchak; Victor V. Solovyev; Rod A. Wing; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton; Ramil Mauleon; Kenneth L. McNally; Nickolai Alexandrov

Here we analyse genetic variation, population structure and diversity among 3,010 diverse Asian cultivated rice (Oryza sativa L.) genomes from the 3,000 Rice Genomes Project. Our results are consistent with the five major groups previously recognized, but also suggest several unreported subpopulations that correlate with geographic location. We identified 29 million single nucleotide polymorphisms, 2.4 million small indels and over 90,000 structural variations that contribute to within- and between-population variation. Using pan-genome analyses, we identified more than 10,000 novel full-length protein-coding genes and a high number of presence–absence variations. The complex patterns of introgression observed in domestication genes are consistent with multiple independent rice domestication events. The public availability of data from the 3,000 Rice Genomes Project provides a resource for rice genomics research and breeding.Analyses of genetic variation and population structure based on over 3,000 cultivated rice (Oryza sativa) genomes reveal subpopulations that correlate with geographic location and patterns of introgression consistent with multiple rice domestication events.


Trends in Plant Science | 2016

Plant Genetic Resources: Needs, Rights, and Opportunities

C. Roa; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton; Peter Wenzl; Wayne Powell

We describe updates to the Rice SNP-Seek Database since its first release. We ran a new SNP-calling pipeline followed by filtering that resulted in complete, base, filtered and core SNP datasets. Besides the Nipponbare reference genome, the pipeline was run on genome assemblies of IR 64, 93-11, DJ 123 and Kasalath. New genotype query and display features are added for reference assemblies, SNP datasets and indels. JBrowse now displays BAM, VCF and other annotation tracks, the additional genome assemblies and an embedded VISTA genome comparison viewer. Middleware is redesigned for improved performance by using a hybrid of HDF5 and RDMS for genotype storage. Query modules for genotypes, varieties and genes are improved to handle various constraints. An integrated list manager allows the user to pass query parameters for further analysis. The SNP Annotator adds traits, ontology terms, effects and interactions to markers in a list. Web-service calls were implemented to access most data. These features enable seamless querying of SNP-Seek across various biological entities, a step toward semi-automated gene-trait association discovery. URL: http://snp-seek.irri.org.


New Phytologist | 2018

Plant genetic resources for food and agriculture: opportunities and challenges emerging from the science and information technology revolution

Michael Halewood; Tinashe Chiurugwi; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton; Brad Kurtz; Emily Marden; Eric W. Welch; Frank Michiels; Javad Mozafari; Muhamad Sabran; Nicola J. Patron; Paul J. Kersey; Ruth Bastow; Shawn F. Dorius; Sonia Dias; Susan R. McCouch; Wayne Powell

Technological advances allow us to tap into genetic resources to address food and nutritional security in the face of population growth, urbanization, climate change, and environmental degradation. It is vital, particularly for developing countries, to ensure that the policy framework regulating access and use of genetic resources keeps pace with technological developments.


Biopreservation and Biobanking | 2018

Using Genomic Sequence Information to Increase Conservation and Sustainable Use of Crop Diversity and Benefit-Sharing

Michael Halewood; Isabel López Noriega; D. Ellis; C. Roa; Mathieu Rouard; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton

Contents Summary 1407 I. Introduction 1408 II. Technological advances and their utility for gene banks and breeding, and longer-term contributions to SDGs 1408 III. The challenges that must be overcome to realise emerging R&D opportunities 1410 IV. Renewed governance structures for PGR (and related big data) 1413 V. Access and benefit sharing and big data 1416 VI. Conclusion 1417 Acknowledgements 1417 ORCID 1417 References 1417 SUMMARY: Over the last decade, there has been an ongoing revolution in the exploration, manipulation and synthesis of biological systems, through the development of new technologies that generate, analyse and exploit big data. Users of Plant Genetic Resources (PGR) can potentially leverage these capacities to significantly increase the efficiency and effectiveness of their efforts to conserve, discover and utilise novel qualities in PGR, and help achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This review advances the discussion on these emerging opportunities and discusses how taking advantage of them will require data integration and synthesis across disciplinary, organisational and international boundaries, and the formation of multi-disciplinary, international partnerships. We explore some of the institutional and policy challenges that these efforts will face, particularly how these new technologies may influence the structure and role of research for sustainable development, ownership of resources, and access and benefit sharing. We discuss potential responses to political and institutional challenges, ranging from options for enhanced structure and governance of research discovery platforms to internationally brokered benefit-sharing agreements, and identify a set of broad principles that could guide the global community as it seeks or considers solutions.


American Journal of Botany | 2012

Genomics of gene banks: A case study in rice

Susan R. McCouch; Kenneth L. McNally; Wen Wang; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton

This article describes how CGIAR centers and partners are using genomic sequence information to promote the conservation and sustainable use of crop genetic diversity, and to generate and share benefits derived from those uses. The article highlights combined institutional, and benefit-sharing-related challenges that need to be addressed to support expanded use of digital sequence information in agricultural research and development.


intelligent systems in molecular biology | 2003

Linking genotype to phenotype: the International Rice Information System (IRIS)

Richard Bruskiewich; Alexander B. Cosico; William Eusebio; Arllet Portugal; Luralyn M. Ramos; Ma. Teresa Reyes; May Ann B. Sallan; Victor Jun Ulat; Xusheng Wang; Kenneth L. McNally; Ruaraidh Sackville Hamilton; Christopher Graham McLaren

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Kenneth L. McNally

International Rice Research Institute

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Ramil Mauleon

International Rice Research Institute

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Kevin Palis

International Rice Research Institute

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Locedie Mansueto

International Rice Research Institute

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Dmytro Chebotarov

International Rice Research Institute

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Roven Rommel Fuentes

International Rice Research Institute

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