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Featured researches published by Sid Perry.


BMC Genomics | 2010

Population- and genome-specific patterns of linkage disequilibrium and SNP variation in spring and winter wheat (Triticum aestivum L.).

Shiaoman Chao; Jorge Dubcovsky; Jan Dvorak; Ming-Cheng Luo; Rustam Matnyazov; Dale R. Clark; L. E. Talbert; James A. Anderson; Susanne Dreisigacker; Karl D. Glover; Jianli Chen; Kim Garland Campbell; Phil L. Bruckner; Jackie C. Rudd; Scott D. Haley; Brett F. Carver; Sid Perry; Mark E. Sorrells; Eduard Akhunov

BackgroundSingle nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) are ideally suited for the construction of high-resolution genetic maps, studying population evolutionary history and performing genome-wide association mapping experiments. Here, we used a genome-wide set of 1536 SNPs to study linkage disequilibrium (LD) and population structure in a panel of 478 spring and winter wheat cultivars (Triticum aestivum) from 17 populations across the United States and Mexico.ResultsMost of the wheat oligo pool assay (OPA) SNPs that were polymorphic within the complete set of 478 cultivars were also polymorphic in all subpopulations. Higher levels of genetic differentiation were observed among wheat lines within populations than among populations. A total of nine genetically distinct clusters were identified, suggesting that some of the pre-defined populations shared significant proportion of genetic ancestry. Estimates of population structure (FST) at individual loci showed a high level of heterogeneity across the genome. In addition, seven genomic regions with elevated FST were detected between the spring and winter wheat populations. Some of these regions overlapped with previously mapped flowering time QTL. Across all populations, the highest extent of significant LD was observed in the wheat D-genome, followed by lower LD in the A- and B-genomes. The differences in the extent of LD among populations and genomes were mostly driven by differences in long-range LD ( > 10 cM).ConclusionsGenome- and population-specific patterns of genetic differentiation and LD were discovered in the populations of wheat cultivars from different geographic regions. Our study demonstrated that the estimates of population structure between spring and winter wheat lines can identify genomic regions harboring candidate genes involved in the regulation of growth habit. Variation in LD suggests that breeding and selection had a different impact on each wheat genome both within and among populations. The higher extent of LD in the wheat D-genome versus the A- and B-genomes likely reflects the episodes of recent introgression and population bottleneck accompanying the origin of hexaploid wheat. The assessment of LD and population structure in this assembled panel of diverse lines provides critical information for the development of genetic resources for genome-wide association mapping of agronomically important traits in wheat.


Archive | 2015

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W08-1836

Sid Perry


Archive | 2013

WHEAT CULTIVAR WB-DEUCECL+

Sid Perry


Archive | 2017

WHEAT CULTIVAR BZ9W09-2212

Sid Perry


Archive | 2016

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W10-0458

Sid Perry


Archive | 2016

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W10-0129

Sid Perry


Archive | 2016

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W09-0640

Sid Perry


Archive | 2016

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W10-0887

Sid Perry


Archive | 2016

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W10-1002

Sid Perry


Archive | 2016

WHEAT CULTIVAR HV9W10-0091

Sid Perry

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Jan Dvorak

University of California

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Jorge Dubcovsky

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Karl D. Glover

South Dakota State University

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