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Featured researches published by Steven D. Tanksley.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1988

Molecular mapping of rice chromosomes

Susan R. McCouch; G. Kochert; Z. H. Yu; Z. Y. Wang; Gurdev S. Khush; W. R. Coffman; Steven D. Tanksley

SummaryWe report the construction of an RFLP genetic map of rice (Oryza sativa) chromosomes. The map is comprised of 135 loci corresponding to clones selected from a PstI genomic library. This molecular map covers 1,389 cM of the rice genome and exceeds the current classical maps by more than 20%. The map was generated from F2 segregation data (50 individuals) from a cross between an indica and javanica rice cultivar. Primary trisomics were used to assign linkage groups to each of the 12 rice chromosomes. Seventy-eight percent of the clones assayed revealed RFLPs between the two parental cultivars, indicating that rice contains a significant amount of RFLP variation. Strong correlations between size of hybridizing restriction fragments and level of polymorphism indicate that a significant proportion of the RFLPs in rice are generated by insertions/delections. This conclusion is supported by the occurrence of null alleles for some clones (presumably created by insertion or deletion events). One clone, RG229, hybridized to sequences in both the indica and javanica genomes, which have apparently transposed since the divergence of the two cultivars from their last common ancestor, providing evidence for sequence movement in rice. As a by product of this mapping project, we have discovered that rice DNA is less C-methylated than tomato or maize DNA. Our results also suggest the notion that a large fraction of the rice genome (approximately 50%) is single copy.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1995

Abundance, variability and chromosomal location of microsatellites in wheat

Marion S. Röder; J. Plaschke; Susanne U. König; A. Börner; Mark E. Sorrells; Steven D. Tanksley; Martin W. Ganal

The potential of microsatellite sequences as genetic markers in hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum) was investigated with respect to their abundance, variability, chromosomal location and usefulness in related species. By screening a lambda phage library, the total number of (GA)n blocks was estimated to be 3.6 x 104 and the number of (GT)n blocks to be 2.3 x 104 per haploid wheat genome. This results in an average distance of approximately 270 kb between these two microsatellite types combined. Based on sequence analysis data from 70 isolated microsatellites, it was found that wheat microsatellites are relatively long containing up to 40 dinucleotide repeats. Of the tested primer pairs, 36% resulted in fragments with a size corresponding to the expected length of the sequenced microsatellite clone. The variability of 15 microsatellite markers was investigated on 18 wheat accessions. Significantly, more variation was detected with the microsatellite markers than with RFLP markers with, on average, 4.6 different alleles per microsatellite. The 15 PCR-amplified microsatellites were further localized on chromosome arms using cytogenetic stocks of Chinese Spring. Finally, the primers for the 15 wheat microsatellites were used for PCR amplification with rye (Secale cereale) and barley accessions (Hordeum vulgare, H. spontaneum). Amplified fragments were observed for ten primer pairs with barley DNA and for nine primer pairs with rye DNA as template. A microsatellite was found by dot blot analysis in the PCR products of barley and rye DNA for only one primer pair.


Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 1995

Microprep protocol for extraction of DNA from tomato and other herbaceous plants

Theresa M. Fulton; Julapark Chunwongse; Steven D. Tanksley

T he extraction of DNA from plant tissue is a critical and often very time-consuming step in many plant molecular biology procedures. This is especially true for studies of molecular genetics, QTLs, or molecular-marker-based breeding where hundreds or even thousands of plant samples need to be analyzed in a short period of time. Many protocols are laborious and are limited by the need for large amounts of plant tissue. Based on the methods originally described by Murray et al. (1980), we have developed a procedure in our laboratory that maximizes the number of plant samples one person can extract and that yields sufficient DNA for 50 to 100 PCR reactions or two to four Southern blots. The use of very small, new leaves makes it possible to extract DNA from seedlings only one to three weeks old, reducing the need for large amounts of greenhouse space. The entire procedure can be done in 1.5-mL microcentrifuge tubes, eliminating the need for large centrifuges. Using this procedure, one person can isolate DNA from several hundred plants per day. Materials and Solut ions


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1993

Abundance, polymorphism and genetic mapping of microsatellites in rice

Kun-Sheng Wu; Steven D. Tanksley

Dinucleotide microsatellites have been characterized and used as genetic markers in rice. Screening of a rice genomic library with poly(dG-dA)·(dC-dT) and poly(dG-dT)·(dC-dA) probes indicated that (GA)n repeats occurred, on average, once every 225 kb and (GT)n repeats once every 480 kb. DNA sequencing of ten randomly selected microsatellites indicated that the numbers of repeats ranged from 12 to 34 and that the patterns of microsatellites in rice were similar to those of humans and other mammals. Primers to these microsatellite loci as well as to four published microsatellite-containing sequences have been designed and degrees of polymorphism has been examined with 20 rice accessions. Multiple alleles, ranging from 5 to 11, have been observed at all the microsatellite loci in 20 rice accessions. Alleles specific to two cultivated subspecies, indica and japonica, were found in some microsatellite loci. Heterozygosity values of all the microsatellite markers were significantly higher than those of RFLP markers, based upon a parallel comparison. Ten microsatellite loci have been genetically mapped to four rice chromosomes. The genomic distribution of microsatellites appears to be random in rice.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1989

RFLP analysis of the size of chromosomal segments retained around the Tm-2 locus of tomato during backcross breeding.

Nevin D. Young; Steven D. Tanksley

SummaryGenes introduced into cultivated plants by backcross breeding programs are flanked by introgressed segments of DNA derived from the donor parent. This phenomenon is known as linkage drag and is frequently thought to affect traits other than the one originally targeted. The Tm-2 gene of Lycopersicon peruvianum, which confers resistance to tobacco mosaic virus, was introduced into several different tomato cultivars (L. esculentum) by repeated backcrossing. We have measured the sizes of the introgressed segments flanking the Tm-2 locus in several of these cultivars using a high density map of restriction fragment length polymorphic (RFLP) markers. The smallest introgressed segment is estimated to be 4 cM in length, while the longest is over 51 cM in length and contains the entire short arm of chromosome 9. Additionally, RFLP analysis was performed on remnant seed from different intermediate generations corresponding to two different backcross breeding programs for TMV resistance. The results reveal that plants containing desirable recombination near the resistance gene were rarely selected during backcrossing and, as a result, the backcross breeding method was largely ineffective in reducing the size of linked DNA around the resistance gene. We propose that, by monitoring recombination around genes of interest with linked RFLP markers, one can quickly and efficiently reduce the amount of linkage drag associated with introgression. Using such a procedure, it is estimated that an introgressed segment can be obtained in two generations that is as small as that which would otherwise require 100 backcross generations without RFLP selection.


Advances in Agronomy | 1991

DNA Markers in Plant Improvement

Andrew H. Paterson; Steven D. Tanksley; Mark E. Sorrells

Publisher Summary Genetic markers are held for a detailed investigation of complex questions in quantitative biology. The advent of DNA markers, greatly expanding the number of genetic markers available, is allowing researchers to begin to tap the potential of this technology, to the benefit of both basic biology and agricultural productivity. Genetic markers make a major contribution to the biological sciences, especially agriculture, for the foreseeable future. DNA markers can significantly accelerate many breeding endeavors. They may provide new approaches to some objectives, which have proven difficult to achieve with classical techniques, such as introgression of valuable traits from exotic germplasm into domestic cultivars. This chapter addresses the applications of DNA markers to plant breeding. Genetic markers represent genetic variation, permitting one to estimate relatedness between different genotypes and to predict which matings might produce new and superior gene combinations.


The Plant Cell | 2005

Transcriptome and Selected Metabolite Analyses Reveal Multiple Points of Ethylene Control during Tomato Fruit Development

Rob Alba; Paxton Payton; Zhanjun Fei; Ryan McQuinn; Paul Debbie; Gregory B. Martin; Steven D. Tanksley; James J. Giovannoni

Transcriptome profiling via cDNA microarray analysis identified 869 genes that are differentially expressed in developing tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) pericarp. Parallel phenotypic and targeted metabolite comparisons were employed to inform the expression analysis. Transcript accumulation in tomato fruit was observed to be extensively coordinated and often completely dependent on ethylene. Mutation of an ethylene receptor (Never-ripe [Nr]), which reduces ethylene sensitivity and inhibits ripening, alters the expression of 37% of these 869 genes. Nr also influences fruit morphology, seed number, ascorbate accumulation, carotenoid biosynthesis, ethylene evolution, and the expression of many genes during fruit maturation, indicating that ethylene governs multiple aspects of development both prior to and during fruit ripening in tomato. Of the 869 genes identified, 628 share homology (E-value ≤1 × 10−10) with known gene products or known protein domains. Of these 628 loci, 72 share homology with previously described signal transduction or transcription factors, suggesting complex regulatory control. These results demonstrate multiple points of ethylene regulatory control during tomato fruit development and provide new insights into the molecular basis of ethylene-mediated ripening.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1991

RFLP maps of potato and their alignment with the homoeologous tomato genome

Christiane Gebhardt; Enrique Ritter; Amalia Barone; T. Debener; Birgit Walkemeier; U. Schachtschabel; H. Kaufmann; R. D. Thompson; M. W. Bonierbale; Martin W. Ganal; Steven D. Tanksley; Francesco Salamini

SummaryAn RFLP linkage map of the potato is presented which comprises 304 loci derived from 230 DNA probes and one morphological marker (tuber skin color). The self-incompatibility locus of potato was mapped to chromosome I, which is homoeologous to tomato chromosome I. By mapping chromosome-specific tomato RFLP markers in potato and, vice versa, potato markers in tomato, the different potato and tomato RFLP maps were aligned to each other and the similarity of the potato and tomato genome was confirmed. The numbers given to the 12 potato chromosomes are now in accordance with the established tomato nomenclature. Comparisons between potato RFLP maps derived from different genetic backgrounds revealed conservation of marker order but differences in chromosome and total map length. In particular, significant reduction of map length was observed in interspecific compared to intraspecific crosses. The distribution of regions with distorted segregation ratios in the genome was analyzed for four potato parents. The most prominent distortion of recombination was found to be caused by the self-incompatibility locus.


The Plant Cell | 2002

Identification, Analysis, and Utilization of Conserved Ortholog Set Markers for Comparative Genomics in Higher Plants

Theresa M. Fulton; Rutger Van der Hoeven; Nancy T. Eannetta; Steven D. Tanksley

We have screened a large tomato EST database against the Arabidopsis genomic sequence and report here the identification of a set of 1025 genes (referred to as a conserved ortholog set, or COS markers) that are single or low copy in both genomes (as determined by computational screens and DNA gel blot hybridization) and that have remained relatively stable in sequence since the early radiation of dicotyledonous plants. These genes were annotated, and a large portion could be assigned to putative functional categories associated with basic metabolic processes, such as energy-generating processes and the biosynthesis and degradation of cellular building blocks. We further demonstrate, through computational screens (e.g., against a Medicago truncatula database) and direct hybridization on genomic DNA of diverse plant species, that these COS markers also are conserved in the genomes of other plant families. Finally, we show that this gene set can be used for comparative mapping studies between highly divergent genomes such as those of tomato and Arabidopsis. This set of COS markers, identified computationally and experimentally, may further studies on comparative genomes and phylogenetics and elucidate the nature of genes conserved throughout plant evolution.


Molecular Genetics and Genomics | 1993

Homoeologous relationships of rice, wheat and maize chromosomes

S. Ahn; J. A. Anderson; Mark E. Sorrells; Steven D. Tanksley

A set of cDNA clones, which had previously been mapped onto wheat chromosomes, was genetically mapped onto the chromosomes of rice. The resulting comparative maps make it possible to estimate the degree of linkage conservation between these two species. A number of chromosomal rearrangements, some of which must have involved interchromosomal translocations, differentiate the rice and wheat genomes. However, synteny of a large proportion of the loci appears to be conserved between the two species. The results of this study, combined with those from a recently published comparative map of the rice and maize genomes, suggest that rice, wheat and maize share extensive homoeologies in a number of regions in their genomes. Some chromosomes (e.g. chromosome 4 in rice, chromosomes 2 and 2S in wheat and maize, respectively) may have escaped major rearrangement since the divergence of these species from their last common ancestor. Comparative maps for rice, wheat and maize should make it possible to begin uniting the genetics of these species and allow for transfer of mapping information (including centromere positions) and molecular marker resources (e.g. RFLP probes) between species. In addition, such maps should shed light on the nature of chromosome evolution that accompanied the radiation of grasses in the early stages of plant diversification.

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