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Dive into the research topics where William B. Allen is active.

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Featured researches published by William B. Allen.


Nature Genetics | 2008

A phenylalanine in DGAT is a key determinant of oil content and composition in maize

Peizhong Zheng; William B. Allen; Keith Roesler; Mark E. Williams; Shirong Zhang; Jiming Li; Kimberly Glassman; Jerry Ranch; Douglas Nubel; William Edward Solawetz; Dinakar Bhattramakki; Victor Llaca; Stéphane Deschamps; Gan-Yuan Zhong; Mitchell C. Tarczynski; Bo Shen

Plant oil is an important renewable resource for biodiesel production and for dietary consumption by humans and livestock. Through genetic mapping of the oil trait in plants, studies have reported multiple quantitative trait loci (QTLs) with small effects, but the molecular basis of oil QTLs remains largely unknown. Here we show that a high-oil QTL (qHO6) affecting maize seed oil and oleic-acid contents encodes an acyl-CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT1-2), which catalyzes the final step of oil synthesis. We further show that a phenylalanine insertion in DGAT1-2 at position 469 (F469) is responsible for the increased oil and oleic-acid contents. The DGAT1-2 allele with F469 is ancestral, whereas the allele without F469 is a more recent mutant selected by domestication or breeding. Ectopic expression of the high-oil DGAT1-2 allele increases oil and oleic-acid contents by up to 41% and 107%, respectively. This work provides insights into the molecular basis of natural variation of oil and oleic-acid contents in plants and highlights DGAT as a promising target for increasing oil and oleic-acid contents in other crops.


Plant Physiology | 2010

Expression of ZmLEC1 and ZmWRI1 Increases Seed Oil Production in Maize

Bo Shen; William B. Allen; Peizhong Zheng; Changjiang Li; Kimberly Glassman; Jerry Ranch; Douglas Nubel; Mitchell C. Tarczynski

Increasing seed oil production is a major goal for global agriculture to meet the strong demand for oil consumption by humans and for biodiesel production. Previous studies to increase oil synthesis in plants have focused mainly on manipulation of oil pathway genes. As an alternative to single-enzyme approaches, transcription factors provide an attractive solution for altering complex traits, with the caveat that transcription factors may face the challenge of undesirable pleiotropic effects. Here, we report that overexpression of maize (Zea mays) LEAFY COTYLEDON1 (ZmLEC1) increases seed oil by as much as 48% but reduces seed germination and leaf growth in maize. To uncouple oil increase from the undesirable agronomic traits, we identified a LEC1 downstream transcription factor, maize WRINKLED1 (ZmWRI1). Overexpression of ZmWRI1 results in an oil increase similar to overexpression of ZmLEC1 without affecting germination, seedling growth, or grain yield. These results emphasize the importance of field testing for developing a commercial high-oil product and highlight ZmWRI1 as a promising target for increasing oil production in crops.


Cereal Chemistry | 2009

High-Throughput Near-Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy for Predicting Quantitative and Qualitative Composition Phenotypes of Individual Maize Kernels

Gertraud Spielbauer; Paul R. Armstrong; John Baier; William B. Allen; Katina Richardson; Bo Shen; A. Mark Settles

ABSTRACT Near-infrared reflectance (NIR) spectroscopy can be used for fast and reliable prediction of organic compounds in complex biological samples. We used a recently developed NIR spectroscopy instrument to predict starch, protein, oil, and weight of individual maize (Zea mays) seeds. The starch, protein, and oil calibrations have reliability equal or better to bulk grain NIR analyzers. We also show that the instrument can differentiate quantitative and qualitative seed composition mutants from normal siblings without a specific calibration for the constituent affected. The analyzer does not require a specific kernel orientation to predict composition or to differentiate mutants. The instrument collects a seed weight and a spectrum in 4–6 sec and can collect NIR data alone at a 20-fold faster rate. The spectra are acquired while the kernel falls through a glass tube illuminated with broad spectrum light. These results show significant improvements over prior single-kernel NIR systems, making this inst...


Molecular Breeding | 2012

Validation of DGAT1-2 polymorphisms associated with oil content and development of functional markers for molecular breeding of high-oil maize

Yuchao Chai; Xiaomin Hao; Xiaohong Yang; William B. Allen; Jiming Li; Jianbing Yan; Bo Shen; Jiansheng Li

The gene encoding acyl-CoA:diacylglycerol acyltransferase (DGAT1-2) is a key quantitative trait locus that controls oil content and oleic acid composition in maize kernels. Here we re-sequenced the DGAT1-2 region responsible for oil variation in a maize landrace set and in 155 inbred lines (35 high-oil and 120 normal lines). The high-oil DGAT1-2 allele was present in most Northern Flint and Southern Dent populations but was absent in five of eight Corn Belt Dent open-pollinated populations and in most of the earlier inbred lines. Loss of the high-oil DGAT1-2 allele possibly resulted from genetic drift in the early twentieth century when a few Corn Belt Dent populations were selected for the development of high-grain-yield inbred lines. Association analysis detected significant effects of two PCR-based functional markers (HO06 and DGAT04; developed based on DGAT1-2 polymorphisms) on kernel oil content and oleic acid composition using the 155 inbred lines. Zheng58 and Chang7-2, the parent inbred lines of elite hybrid Zhengdan958, were used to transfer the favorable allele from the high-oil line By804 using marker-assisted backcrossing with the two functional markers. In BC5F2:3 populations, oil content of the three genotypes (−/−, +/−, and +/+) was, respectively, 3.37, 4.20, and 4.61% (Zheng58 recipient line) and 4.14, 4.67, and 5.25% (Chang7-2 recipient line). Oil content of homozygous kernels containing the high-oil DGAT1-2 allele increased by 27–37% compared with recurrent parents. Hence, these functional markers can be used to re-introduce the high-oil DGAT1-2 allele into modern inbred lines for increased oil content through marker-assisted backcrossing.


Archive | 2002

Alteration of oil traits in plants

Stephen M. Allen; William B. Allen; Rebecca E. Cahoon; Sabine Epelbaum; Omolayo O. Famodu; Leslie T. Harvell; Todd J. Jones; Anthony J. Kinney; Theodore M. Klein; Changjiang Li; Igor Cunha Oliveira; Hajime Sakai; Bo Shen; Mitchell C. Tarczynski


Archive | 2009

ODP1-2 genes and uses thereof in plants

William B. Allen; Bo Shen; Peizhong Zheng


Archive | 2011

Methods of producing maize plants having a high oil phenotype by detecting a marker locus genetically linked with a QTL6 region

William B. Allen; Bo Shen; Mitchell C. Tarczynski; Mark E. Williams; Peizhong Zheng; Gan-Yuan Zhong


Archive | 2007

Compositions apparentées au locus à effets quantitatifs 6 (qtl6) du maïs et leurs procédés d'utilisation

William B. Allen; Bo Shen; Mitchell C. Tarczynski; Mark E. Williams; Peizhong Zheng; Gan-Yuan Zhong


Archive | 2002

Modification des caracteristiques oleagineuses chez les plantes

William B. Allen; Rebecca E. Cahoon; Omolayo O. Famodu; Leslie T. Harvell; Timothy G. Helentjaris; Changjiang Li; Keith S. Lowe; Igor Cunha Oliveira; Bo Shen; Mitchell C. Tarczynski


Archive | 2002

Modifikation des ölprofils von pflanzen

William B. Allen; Rebecca E. Cahoon; Omolayo O. Famodu; Leslie T. Harvell; Timothy G. Helentjaris; Changjiang Li; Keith S. Lowe; Igor Cunha Oliveira; Bo Shen; Mitchell C. Tarczynski

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Bo Shen

University of Arizona

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Rebecca E. Cahoon

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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