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Dive into the research topics where Umesh R. Rosyara is active.

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Featured researches published by Umesh R. Rosyara.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Development and Evaluation of a Genome-Wide 6K SNP Array for Diploid Sweet Cherry and Tetraploid Sour Cherry

Cameron Peace; Nahla V. Bassil; Dorrie Main; Stephen P. Ficklin; Umesh R. Rosyara; Travis Stegmeir; Audrey Sebolt; Barbara Gilmore; Cindy Lawley; Todd C. Mockler; Douglas W. Bryant; Larry J. Wilhelm; Amy F. Iezzoni

High-throughput genome scans are important tools for genetic studies and breeding applications. Here, a 6K SNP array for use with the Illumina Infinium® system was developed for diploid sweet cherry (Prunus avium) and allotetraploid sour cherry (P. cerasus). This effort was led by RosBREED, a community initiative to enable marker-assisted breeding for rosaceous crops. Next-generation sequencing in diverse breeding germplasm provided 25 billion basepairs (Gb) of cherry DNA sequence from which were identified genome-wide SNPs for sweet cherry and for the two sour cherry subgenomes derived from sweet cherry (avium subgenome) and P. fruticosa (fruticosa subgenome). Anchoring to the peach genome sequence, recently released by the International Peach Genome Initiative, predicted relative physical locations of the 1.9 million putative SNPs detected, preliminarily filtered to 368,943 SNPs. Further filtering was guided by results of a 144-SNP subset examined with the Illumina GoldenGate® assay on 160 accessions. A 6K Infinium® II array was designed with SNPs evenly spaced genetically across the sweet and sour cherry genomes. SNPs were developed for each sour cherry subgenome by using minor allele frequency in the sour cherry detection panel to enrich for subgenome-specific SNPs followed by targeting to either subgenome according to alleles observed in sweet cherry. The array was evaluated using panels of sweet (n = 269) and sour (n = 330) cherry breeding germplasm. Approximately one third of array SNPs were informative for each crop. A total of 1825 polymorphic SNPs were verified in sweet cherry, 13% of these originally developed for sour cherry. Allele dosage was resolved for 2058 polymorphic SNPs in sour cherry, one third of these being originally developed for sweet cherry. This publicly available genomics resource represents a significant advance in cherry genome-scanning capability that will accelerate marker-locus-trait association discovery, genome structure investigation, and genetic diversity assessment in this diploid-tetraploid crop group.


Molecular Breeding | 2013

Cell number regulator genes in Prunus provide candidate genes for the control of fruit size in sweet and sour cherry

P. De Franceschi; Travis Stegmeir; Antonio Cabrera; E. van der Knaap; Umesh R. Rosyara; Audrey Sebolt; Luca Dondini; E. Dirlewanger; J. Quero-Garcia; J. A. Campoy; Amy F. Iezzoni

Striking increases in fruit size distinguish cultivated descendants from small-fruited wild progenitors for fleshy fruited species such as Solanum lycopersicum (tomato) and Prunus spp. (peach, cherry, plum, and apricot). The first fruit weight gene identified as a result of domestication and selection was the tomato FW2.2 gene. Members of the FW2.2 gene family in corn (Zea mays) have been named CNR (Cell Number Regulator) and two of them exert their effect on organ size by modulating cell number. Due to the critical roles of FW2.2/CNR genes in regulating cell number and organ size, this family provides an excellent source of candidates for fruit size genes in other domesticated species, such as those found in the Prunus genus. A total of 23 FW2.2/CNR family members were identified in the peach genome, spanning the eight Prunus chromosomes. Two of these CNRs were located within confidence intervals of major quantitative trait loci (QTL) previously discovered on linkage groups 2 and 6 in sweet cherry (Prunus avium), named PavCNR12 and PavCNR20, respectively. An analysis of haplotype, sequence, segregation and association with fruit size strongly supports a role of PavCNR12 in the sweet cherry linkage group 2 fruit size QTL, and this QTL is also likely present in sour cherry (P. cerasus). The finding that the increase in fleshy fruit size in both tomato and cherry associated with domestication may be due to changes in members of a common ancestral gene family supports the notion that similar phenotypic changes exhibited by independently domesticated taxa may have a common genetic basis.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Construction and Comparative Analyses of Highly Dense Linkage Maps of Two Sweet Cherry Intra-Specific Progenies of Commercial Cultivars

Carolina Klagges; José Antonio Campoy; José Quero-García; Alejandra Guzmán; Leví Mansur; Eduardo Gratacós; Herman Silva; Umesh R. Rosyara; Amy F. Iezzoni; Lee Meisel; Elisabeth Dirlewanger

Despite the agronomical importance and high synteny with other Prunus species, breeding improvements for cherry have been slow compared to other temperate fruits, such as apple or peach. However, the recent release of the peach genome v1.0 by the International Peach Genome Initiative and the sequencing of cherry accessions to identify Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (SNPs) provide an excellent basis for the advancement of cherry genetic and genomic studies. The availability of dense genetic linkage maps in phenotyped segregating progenies would be a valuable tool for breeders and geneticists. Using two sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) intra-specific progenies derived from crosses between ‘Black Tartarian’ × ‘Kordia’ (BT×K) and ‘Regina’ × ‘Lapins’(R×L), high-density genetic maps of the four parental lines and the two segregating populations were constructed. For BT×K and R×L, 89 and 121 F1 plants were used for linkage mapping, respectively. A total of 5,696 SNP markers were tested in each progeny. As a result of these analyses, 723 and 687 markers were mapped into eight linkage groups (LGs) in BT×K and R×L, respectively. The resulting maps spanned 752.9 and 639.9 cM with an average distance of 1.1 and 0.9 cM between adjacent markers in BT×K and R×L, respectively. The maps displayed high synteny and co-linearity between each other, with the Prunus bin map, and with the peach genome v1.0 for all eight LGs (LG1–LG8). These maps provide a useful tool for investigating traits of interest in sweet cherry and represent a qualitative advance in the understanding of the cherry genome and its synteny with other members of the Rosaceae family.


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2012

Rosaceae conserved orthologous sequences marker polymorphism in sweet cherry germplasm and construction of a SNP-based map

Antonio Cabrera; Umesh R. Rosyara; Paolo De Franceschi; Audrey Sebolt; Suneth S. Sooriyapathirana; Elisabeth Dirlewanger; José Quero-García; Mirko Schuster; Amy F. Iezzoni; Esther van der Knaap

The Rosaceae Conserved Orthologous Set (RosCOS) provides a gene-based genome-wide set of markers that have been used in comparative analyses of peach (Prunus persica), apple (Malus × domestica), and strawberry (Fragaria spp.). In order to extend the use of these RosCOS to sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.), we identified markers that are polymorphic in breeding germplasm. Ninety-five percent (595/627) of previously designed RosCOS primer pairs amplified a product in six sweet cherry cultivars predicted to represent the range of genetic diversity in breeding germplasm. A total of 45% (282/627) RosCOS were polymorphic among the six cultivars, and allele number ranged from 2 to 6, with a genome-wide mean of 2.35. A subset of 92 genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) corresponding to 76 RosCOS was analyzed in 36 founder accessions and progeny. The expected and observed heterozygosity suggested that 83% of the RosCOS were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium, implying that most RosCOS behave as neutral markers. Principal coordinate analysis (PCO) identified one wild accession and two Spanish landraces that clustered differently from the other accessions. The relatively high number of unique alleles found in the three differentially clustered selections suggested that their use as parents has potential to increase the genetic diversity in future US-bred cultivars. Of the 92 RosCOS SNPs, 81 SNPs that represented 68 genome-wide RosCOS segregated in four mapping populations. These RosCOS were mapped in four F1 populations, thereby greatly improving the genetic linkage map of sweet cherry.


Molecular Breeding | 2014

Cherry leaf spot resistance in cherry (Prunus) is associated with a quantitative trait locus on linkage group 4 inherited from P. canescens

Travis Stegmeir; Mirko Schuster; Audrey Sebolt; Umesh R. Rosyara; George W. Sundin; Amy F. Iezzoni

Cherry leaf spot (CLS), caused by the fungal pathogen Blumeriella jaapii (Rehm) Arx (telomorph Phloeosporella padi [Lib.] Arx), is a major disease in all humid cherry-growing regions worldwide causing leaf yellowing and defoliation. The diploid Prunus species, P. canescens, had previously been identified as a source of CLS resistance. Therefore, the objective of this study was to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) for CLS resistance derived from P. canescens in both diploid sweet cherry (P. avium) and tetraploid sour cherry (P. cerasus). Because of the simpler genetics of diploid cherry, the initial investigation was done with P. canescens-derived materials from crosses with sweet cherry, followed by validation using P. canescens-derived plant materials from sour cherry. A major QTL controlling P. canescens-derived CLS resistance, named CLSR_G4, was identified on linkage group 4 in sweet cherry and validated in sour cherry. All CLS-resistant individuals had one P. canescens-derived allele for CLSR_G4. A second QTL may be necessary for CLS resistance as one-fifth–one-third of the progeny individuals with the P. canescens-derived allele for CLSR_G4 were susceptible.


BMC Genomics | 2015

Development and preliminary evaluation of a 90 K Axiom® SNP array for the allo-octoploid cultivated strawberry Fragaria × ananassa

Nahla V. Bassil; Thomas M. Davis; Hailong Zhang; Stephen P. Ficklin; Mike Mittmann; Teresa Webster; Lise L. Mahoney; David Wood; Elisabeth S Alperin; Umesh R. Rosyara; Herma Koehorst-vanc Putten; Amparo Monfort; Daniel J. Sargent; Iraida Amaya; Béatrice Denoyes; Luca Bianco; Thijs van Dijk; Ali Pirani; Amy F. Iezzoni; Dorrie Main; Cameron Peace; Yilong Yang; Vance M. Whitaker; Sujeet Verma; Laurent Bellon; Fiona Brew; Raúl Herrera; Eric van de Weg


Tree Genetics & Genomes | 2014

A consensus 'Honeycrisp' apple (Malus × domestica) genetic linkage map from three full-sib progeny populations

Matthew D. Clark; Cari A. Schmitz; Umesh R. Rosyara; James J. Luby; James M. Bradeen


Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2014

Identification of the paternal parent of 'Bing' sweet cherry and confirmation of descendants using single nucleotide polymorphism markers

Umesh R. Rosyara; Audrey Sebolt; Cameron Peace; Amy F. Iezzoni


Euphytica | 2017

Genotype by environment interactions and combining ability for strawberry families grown in diverse environments

Megan M. Mathey; Sonali Mookerjee; Lise L. Mahoney; Kazim Gündüz; Umesh R. Rosyara; James F. Hancock; P. Stewart; Vance M. Whitaker; Nahla Bassil; Thomas M. Davis; Chad E. Finn


Acta Horticulturae | 2015

BACTERIAL SPOT RESISTANCE IN PEACH: FUNCTIONAL ALLELE DISTRIBUTION IN BREEDING GERMPLASM

Ksenija Gasic; Gregory L. Reighard; William R. Okie; John R. Clark; Thomas M. Gradziel; D. Byrne; Cameron Peace; Travis Stegmeir; Umesh R. Rosyara; Amy F. Iezzoni

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Amy F. Iezzoni

Michigan State University

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Audrey Sebolt

Michigan State University

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Cameron Peace

Washington State University

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Travis Stegmeir

Michigan State University

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Dorrie Main

Washington State University

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Nahla V. Bassil

National Clonal Germplasm Repository

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Stephen P. Ficklin

Washington State University

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Barbara Gilmore

United States Department of Agriculture

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