Thiago G. Marconi
State University of Campinas
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Featured researches published by Thiago G. Marconi.
Scientific Reports | 2013
Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Marcelo Mollinari; Thiago G. Marconi; Oliver Serang; Renato R. Silva; Maria Lucia Carneiro Vieira; Renato Vicentini; Estela Araujo Costa; Melina Cristina Mancini; Melissa O. S. Garcia; M. M. Pastina; Rodrigo Gazaffi; Eliana Regina Forni Martins; Nair Dahmer; Danilo Augusto Sforça; Claudio B. C. Silva; Peter C Bundock; Robert J Henry; Glaucia Mendes Souza; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Marcos Guimarães de Andrade Landell; Monalisa Sampaio Carneiro; Michel A. G. Vincentz; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Roland Vencovsky; Anete Pereira de Souza
Many plant species of great economic value (e.g., potato, wheat, cotton, and sugarcane) are polyploids. Despite the essential roles of autopolyploid plants in human activities, our genetic understanding of these species is still poor. Recent progress in instrumentation and biochemical manipulation has led to the accumulation of an incredible amount of genomic data. In this study, we demonstrate for the first time a successful genetic analysis in a highly polyploid genome (sugarcane) by the quantitative analysis of single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) allelic dosage and the application of a new data analysis framework. This study provides a better understanding of autopolyploid genomic structure and is a sound basis for genetic studies. The proposed methods can be employed to analyse the genome of any autopolyploid and will permit the future development of high-quality genetic maps to assist in the assembly of reference genome sequences for polyploid species.
Tropical Plant Biology | 2010
Carlos Takeshi Hotta; Carolina G. Lembke; Douglas Silva Domingues; Edgar A. Ochoa; Guilherme M. Q. Cruz; Danila Montewka Melotto-Passarin; Thiago G. Marconi; M. O. Santos; Marcelo Mollinari; Gabriel Rodrigues Alves Margarido; Augusto C. Crivellari; Wanderley Dantas dos Santos; Amanda P. De Souza; Andrea Akemi Hoshino; Helaine Carrer; Anete Pereira de Souza; Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Marcos S. Buckeridge; Marcelo Menossi; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Glaucia Mendes Souza
Due to the strategic importance of sugarcane to Brazil, FAPESP, the main São Paulo state research funding agency, launched in 2008 the FAPESP Bioenergy Research Program (BIOEN, http://bioenfapesp.org). BIOEN aims to generate new knowledge and human resources for the improvement of the sugarcane and ethanol industry. As part of the BIOEN program, a Workshop on Sugarcane Improvement was held on March 18th and 19th 2009 in São Paulo, Brazil. The aim of the workshop was to explore present and future challenges for sugarcane improvement and its use as a sustainable bioenergy and biomaterial feedstock. The workshop was divided in four sections that represent important challenges for sugarcane improvement: a) gene discovery and sugarcane genomics, b) transgenics and controlled transgene expression, c) sugarcane physiology (photosynthesis, sucrose metabolism, and drought) and d) breeding and statistical genetics. This report summarizes the roadmap for the improvement of sugarcane.
BMC Research Notes | 2011
Thiago G. Marconi; Estela Araujo Costa; Hercília Rcan Miranda; Melina Cristina Mancini; Claudio Benicio Cardoso-Silva; Karine Miranda Oliveira; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Marcelo Mollinari; A. A. F. Garcia; Anete Pereira de Souza
BackgroundThe database of sugarcane expressed sequence tags (EST) offers a great opportunity for developing molecular markers that are directly associated with important agronomic traits. The development of new EST-SSR markers represents an important tool for genetic analysis. In sugarcane breeding programs, functional markers can be used to accelerate the process and select important agronomic traits, especially in the mapping of quantitative traits loci (QTL) and plant resistant pathogens or qualitative resistance loci (QRL). The aim of this work was to develop new simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers in sugarcane using the sugarcane expressed sequence tag (SUCEST database).FindingsA total of 365 EST-SSR molecular markers with trinucleotide motifs were developed and evaluated in a collection of 18 genotypes of sugarcane (15 varieties and 3 species). In total, 287 of the EST-SSRs markers amplified fragments of the expected size and were polymorphic in the analyzed sugarcane varieties. The number of alleles ranged from 2-18, with an average of 6 alleles per locus, while polymorphism information content values ranged from 0.21-0.92, with an average of 0.69. The discrimination power was high for the majority of the EST-SSRs, with an average value of 0.80. Among the markers characterized in this study some have particular interest, those that are related to bacterial defense responses, generation of precursor metabolites and energy and those involved in carbohydrate metabolic process.ConclusionsThese EST-SSR markers presented in this work can be efficiently used for genetic mapping studies of segregating sugarcane populations. The high Polymorphism Information Content (PIC) and Discriminant Power (DP) presented facilitate the QTL identification and marker-assisted selection due the association with functional regions of the genome became an important tool for the sugarcane breeding program.
BMC Genetics | 2012
Alessandra Palhares; Taislene B Rodrigues-Morais; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Douglas Silva Domingues; Walter Maccheroni; Hamilton Jordão; Anete Pereira de Souza; Thiago G. Marconi; Marcelo Mollinari; Rodrigo Gazaffi; Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Maria Lucia Carneiro Vieira
BackgroundThe development of sugarcane as a sustainable crop has unlimited applications. The crop is one of the most economically viable for renewable energy production, and CO2 balance. Linkage maps are valuable tools for understanding genetic and genomic organization, particularly in sugarcane due to its complex polyploid genome of multispecific origins. The overall objective of our study was to construct a novel sugarcane linkage map, compiling AFLP and EST-SSR markers, and to generate data on the distribution of markers anchored to sequences of scIvana_1, a complete sugarcane transposable element, and member of the Copia superfamily.ResultsThe mapping population parents (‘IAC66-6’ and ‘TUC71-7’) contributed equally to polymorphisms, independent of marker type, and generated markers that were distributed into nearly the same number of co-segregation groups (or CGs). Bi-parentally inherited alleles provided the integration of 19 CGs. The marker number per CG ranged from two to 39. The total map length was 4,843.19 cM, with a marker density of 8.87 cM. Markers were assembled into 92 CGs that ranged in length from 1.14 to 404.72 cM, with an estimated average length of 52.64 cM. The greatest distance between two adjacent markers was 48.25 cM. The scIvana_1-based markers (56) were positioned on 21 CGs, but were not regularly distributed. Interestingly, the distance between adjacent scIvana_1-based markers was less than 5 cM, and was observed on five CGs, suggesting a clustered organization.ConclusionsResults indicated the use of a NBS-profiling technique was efficient to develop retrotransposon-based markers in sugarcane. The simultaneous maximum-likelihood estimates of linkage and linkage phase based strategies confirmed the suitability of its approach to estimate linkage, and construct the linkage map. Interestingly, using our genetic data it was possible to calculate the number of retrotransposon scIvana_1 (~60) copies in the sugarcane genome, confirming previously reported molecular results. In addition, this research possibly will have indirect implications in crop economics e.g., productivity enhancement via QTL studies, as the mapping population parents differ in response to an important fungal disease.
Archive | 2017
Melina Cristina Mancini; Claudio Benicio Cardoso-Silva; Estela Araujo Costa; Thiago G. Marconi; Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Anete Pereira de Souza
Modern sugarcane cultivars (Saccharum spp.) are derived from an interspecific hybridization between Saccharum officinarum and Saccharum spontaneum and pose a significant challenge for both genotyping and data analysis. Due to their large (estimated at approximately 10 Gb) and complex genome, which can include variable ploidy levels and aneuploidy, studies involving molecular markers for genetic and quantitative trait locus (QTL) mapping are extremely laborious. Several advances in the genetics and genomics of sugarcane have recently become possible with the emergence of new sequencing technologies, the use of several types of marker systems, and the use of genotyping data analysis software. Molecular markers and comparative genomics are powerful resources that allow us to explore allelic variation and to thus understand the genome organization of sugarcane. This chapter provides an overview of what is known about the genetic structure and the genomics of sugarcane as well as the main genomics strategies developed for sugarcane. Among the strategies discussed are the use of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) libraries and the analysis of the syntenic relationships with related species (maize, sorghum, and rice).
Plant Breeding | 2006
Luciana Rossini Pinto; Karine Miranda Oliveira; Thiago G. Marconi; Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Eugênio César Ulian; A. P. de Souza
Genome | 2009
Karine Miranda Oliveira; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Thiago G. Marconi; Marcelo Mollinari; Eugênio César Ulian; S. M. Chabregas; M. C. Falco; W. Burnquist; A. A. F. Garcia; Anete Pereira de Souza
Molecular Breeding | 2007
Karine Miranda Oliveira; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Thiago G. Marconi; Gabriel Rodrigues Alves Margarido; M. M. Pastina; Laura Helena Marcon Teixeira; Antonio Figueira; Eugênio César Ulian; Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Anete Pereira de Souza
BMC Medical Genetics | 2016
Rogério Marins Alves; Sueli Matilde da Silva Costa; Paulo Maurício do Amor Divino Miranda; Priscila Zonzini Ramos; Thiago G. Marconi; Gisele Santos Oliveira; Arthur Menino Castilho; Edi Lúcia Sartorato
Archive | 2013
Antonio Augusto Franco Garcia; Marcelo Mollinari; Thiago G. Marconi; Oliver Serang; Renato R. Silva; Maria Lucia Carneiro Vieira; Renato Vicentini; Estela Araujo Costa; Melina Cristina Mancini; Melissa O. S. Garcia; M. M. Pastina; Rodrigo Gazaffi; Eliana Regina Forni Martins; Nair Dahmer; Danilo Augusto Sforça; Claudio B. C. Silva; Peter C Bundock; Robert J Henry; Glaucia Mendes Souza; Marie-Anne Van Sluys; Marcos Guimarães de Andrade Landell; Monalisa Sampaio Carneiro; Michel A. G. Vincentz; Luciana Rossini Pinto; Roland Vencovsky; Anete Pereira de Souza