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Featured researches published by Zujun Yang.


Journal of Applied Genetics | 2014

Oligonucleotides replacing the roles of repetitive sequences pAs1, pSc119.2, pTa-535, pTa71, CCS1, and pAWRC.1 for FISH analysis

Zongxiang Tang; Zujun Yang; Shulan Fu

Hybrids derived from wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) × rye (Secale cereale L.) have been widely studied because of their important roles in wheat cultivar improvement. Repetitive sequences pAs1, pSc119.2, pTa-535, pTa71, CCS1, and pAWRC.1 are usually used as probes in fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis of wheat, rye, and hybrids derived from wheat × rye. Usually, some of these repetitive sequences for FISH analysis were needed to be amplified from a bacterial plasmid, extracted from bacterial cells, and labeled by nick translation. Therefore, the conventional procedure of probe preparation using these repetitive sequences is time-consuming and labor-intensive. In this study, some appropriate oligonucleotide probes have been developed which can replace the roles of repetitive sequences pAs1, pSc119.2, pTa-535, pTa71, CCS1, and pAWRC.1 in FISH analysis of wheat, rye, and hybrids derived from wheat × rye. These oligonucleotides can be synthesized easily and cheaply. Therefore, FISH analysis of wheat and hybrids derived from wheat × rye using these oligonucleotide probes becomes easier and more economical.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

The CentO satellite confers translational and rotational phasing on cenH3 nucleosomes in rice centromeres

Tao Zhang; Paul B. Talbert; Wenli Zhang; Yufeng Wu; Zujun Yang; Jorja G. Henikoff; Steven Henikoff; Jiming Jiang

Significance Centromeres are sites on chromosomes that mediate attachment to microtubules for chromosome segregation and often comprise tandemly repeated “satellite” sequences. The function of these repeats is unclear because centromeres can be formed on single-copy DNA by the presence of nucleosomes containing a centromere-specific variant of histone H3 (cenH3). Rice has centromeres composed of both the 155-bp CentO satellite repeat and single-copy non-CentO sequences. This study shows that rice cenH3 nucleosomes are regularly spaced with 155-bp periodicity on CentO repeats, but not on non-CentO sequences. CentO repeats have an ∼10-bp periodicity in dinucleotide pattern and in nuclease cleavage that suggests that CentO has evolved to minimize its bending energy on cenH3 nucleosomes and that centromeric satellites evolve for stabilization of cenH3 nucleosomes. Plant and animal centromeres comprise megabases of highly repeated satellite sequences, yet centromere function can be specified epigenetically on single-copy DNA by the presence of nucleosomes containing a centromere-specific variant of histone H3 (cenH3). We determined the positions of cenH3 nucleosomes in rice (Oryza sativa), which has centromeres composed of both the 155-bp CentO satellite repeat and single-copy non-CentO sequences. We find that cenH3 nucleosomes protect 90–100 bp of DNA from micrococcal nuclease digestion, sufficient for only a single wrap of DNA around the cenH3 nucleosome core. cenH3 nucleosomes are translationally phased with 155-bp periodicity on CentO repeats, but not on non-CentO sequences. CentO repeats have an ∼10-bp periodicity in WW dinucleotides and in micrococcal nuclease cleavage, providing evidence for rotational phasing of cenH3 nucleosomes on CentO and suggesting that satellites evolve for translational and rotational stabilization of centromeric nucleosomes.


Scientific Reports | 2015

Oligonucleotide Probes for ND-FISH Analysis to Identify Rye and Wheat Chromosomes

Shulan Fu; Lei Chen; Yangyang Wang; Meng Li; Zujun Yang; Ling Qiu; Benju Yan; Zhenglong Ren; Zongxiang Tang

Genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) has been widely used to detect rye (Secale cereale L.) chromosomes in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) introgression lines. The routine procedure of GISH using genomic DNA of rye as a probe is time-consuming and labor-intensive because of the preparation and labeling of genomic DNA of rye and denaturing of chromosomes and probes. In this study, new oligonucleotide probes Oligo-1162, Oligo-pSc200 and Oligo-pSc250 were developed. The three new probes can be used for non-denaturing fluorescence in situ hybridization (ND-FISH) assays and replace genomic DNA of rye as a probe to discriminate rye chromosomes in wheat backgrounds. In addition, previously developed oligonucleotide probes Oligo-pSc119.2-1, Oligo-pSc119.2-2, Oligo-pTa535-1, Oligo-pTa535-2, Oligo-pTa71-2, Oligo-pAWRC.1 and Oligo-CCS1 can also be used for ND-FISH of wheat and rye. These probes have provided an easier, faster and more cost-effective method for the FISH analysis of wheat and hybrids derived from wheat × rye.


Euphytica | 2011

Molecular cytogenetic identification of a new wheat-Thinopyrum substitution line with stripe rust resistance

Lijun Hu; Guangrong Li; Zi-Xian Zeng; Zhijian Chang; Cheng Liu; Jianping Zhou; Zujun Yang

A new wheat-Thinopyrum substitution line AS1677, developed from a cross between wheat line ML-13 and wheat-Thinopyrum intermedium ssp. trichophorum partial amphiploid TE-3, was characterized by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), sequential Giemsa-C banding, genomic in situ hybridization (GISH), seed storage protein electrophoresis, molecular marker analysis and disease resistance screening. Sequential Giemsa-C banding and GISH using Pseudoroegneria spicata genomic DNA as probe indicated that a pair of St-chromosomes with strong terminal bands were introduced into AS1677. FISH using pTa71 as a probe gave strong hybridization signals at the nuclear organization region and in the distal region of the short arms of the St chromosome. Moreover, FISH using the repetitive sequence pAs1 revealed that a pair of wheat 1D chromosomes was absent in accession AS1677. Seed storage proteins separated by acid polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (APAGE) and sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) confirmed that AS1677 lacked the gliadin and glutenin bands encoded by Gli-D1 and Glu-D1, further confirming the absence of chromosome 1D. The introduced St chromosome pair belonging to homoeologous group 1 was identified by newly produced genome specific markers. AS1677 is a new 1St (1D) substitution line. When inoculated with stripe rust and powdery mildew isolates, AS1677 expressed stripe rust resistance possibly derived from its Thinopyrum parent. AS1677 can be used as a donor source for introducing novel disease resistance genes to wheat in breeding programs aided by molecular and cytogenetic markers.


Genes & Genomics | 2012

Genomic rearrangement between wheat and Thinopyrum elongatum revealed by mapped functional molecular markers

Lijun Hu; Cheng Liu; Zi-Xian Zeng; Guangrong Li; Xiao-Jin Song; Zujun Yang

Thinopyrum elongatum serves as an excellent gene pool for wheat improvement. Genes for resistance to many biotic and abiotic stresses have been transferred from Th. elongatum to wheat through chromosome manipulation. For breeding programs, molecular markers enable screening of a large number of genotypes for alien chromosome introgressions. The main objective of the present study was to develop and characterize EST (expressed sequence tags) and PLUG (PCR-based Landmark Unique Gene) markers that can distinguish Th. elongatum chromatin from the wheat genomes. A total of 258 mapped EST primer pairs and 46 PLUG primer pairs were tested on DNA from wheat Chinese Spring (CS) and CS-Th. elongatum addition lines. The results showed that 43 primer pairs could be effectively mapped to specific Th. elongatum chromosomes. Twenty-two of the 43 markers displayed similar homoeologous chromosome locations to hexaploid wheat. Nine markers mapped to different linkage groups between wheat and Th. elongatum, while 12 makers mapped on two or three different Th. elongatum chromosomes. A comparison of molecular marker locations indicated that Th. elongatum genome was closely related to the D genome of wheat, and chromosome rearrangements and duplication had occurred in Th. elongatum and the wheat genomes. The markers will be useful in comparative gene mapping, chromosome evolutionary analysis, and gene introgression for wheat improvement using Th. elongatum accessions as gene donors.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Chromosomal location and comparative genomics analysis of powdery mildew resistance gene Pm51 in a putative wheat-Thinopyrum ponticum introgression line.

Haixian Zhan; Guangrong Li; Xiaojun Zhang; Xin Li; Huijuan Guo; Wenping Gong; Juqing Jia; Linyi Qiao; Yongkang Ren; Zujun Yang; Zhijian Chang

Powdery mildew (PM) is a very destructive disease of wheat (Triticum aestivum L.). Wheat-Thinopyrum ponticum introgression line CH7086 was shown to possess powdery mildew resistance possibly originating from Th. ponticum. Genomic in situ hybridization and molecular characterization of the alien introgression failed to identify alien chromatin. To study the genetics of resistance, CH7086 was crossed with susceptible genotypes. Segregation in F2 populations and F2:3 lines tested with Chinese Bgt race E09 under controlled conditions indicated that CH7086 carries a single dominant gene for powdery mildew resistance. Fourteen SSR and EST-PCR markers linked with the locus were identified. The genetic distances between the locus and the two flanking markers were 1.5 and 3.2 cM, respectively. Based on the locations of the markers by nullisomic-tetrasomic and deletion lines of ‘Chinese Spring’, the resistance gene was located in deletion bin 2BL-0.89-1.00. Conserved orthologous marker analysis indicated that the genomic region flanking the resistance gene has a high level of collinearity to that of rice chromosome 4 and Brachypodium chromosome 5. Both resistance specificities and tests of allelism suggested the resistance gene in CH7086 was different from previously reported powdery mildew resistance genes on 2BL, and the gene was provisionally designated PmCH86. Molecular analysis of PmCH86 compared with other genes for resistance to Bgt in the 2BL-0.89-1.00 region suggested that PmCH86 may be a new PM resistance gene, and it was therefore designated as Pm51. The closely linked flanking markers could be useful in exploiting this putative wheat-Thinopyrum translocation line for rapid transfer of Pm51 to wheat breeding programs.


Molecular Ecology | 2009

Adaptive microclimatic structural and expressional dehydrin 1 evolution in wild barley, Hordeum spontaneum, at ‘Evolution Canyon’, Mount Carmel, Israel

Zujun Yang; Tao Zhang; Alexander Bolshoy; Alexander Beharav; Eviatar Nevo

‘Evolution Canyon’ (ECI) at Lower Nahal Oren, Mount Carmel, Israel, is an optimal natural microscale model for unravelling evolution in action highlighting the twin evolutionary processes of adaptation and speciation. A major model organism in ECI is wild barley, Hordeum spontaneum, the progenitor of cultivated barley, which displays dramatic interslope adaptive and speciational divergence on the ‘African’ dry slope (AS) and the ‘European’ humid slope (ES), separated on average by 200 m. Here we examined interslope single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) sequences and the expression diversity of the drought resistant dehydrin 1 gene (Dhn1) between the opposite slopes. We analysed 47 plants (genotypes), 4–10 individuals in each of seven stations (populations) in an area of 7000 m2, for Dhn1 sequence diversity located in the 5′ upstream flanking region of the gene. We found significant levels of Dhn1 genic diversity represented by 29 haplotypes, derived from 45 SNPs in a total of 708 bp sites. Most of the haplotypes, 25 out of 29 (= 86.2%), were represented by one genotype; hence, unique to one population. Only a single haplotype was common to both slopes. Genetic divergence of sequence and haplotype diversity was generally and significantly different among the populations and slopes. Nucleotide diversity was higher on the AS, whereas haplotype diversity was higher on the ES. Interslope divergence was significantly higher than intraslope divergence. The applied Tajima D rejected neutrality of the SNP diversity. The Dhn1 expression under dehydration indicated interslope divergent expression between AS and ES genotypes, reinforcing Dhn1 associated with drought resistance of wild barley at ‘Evolution Canyon’. These results are inexplicable by mutation, gene flow, or chance effects, and support adaptive natural microclimatic selection as the major evolutionary divergent driving force.


Plant Systematics and Evolution | 2010

Diversified chromosomal distribution of tandemly repeated sequences revealed evolutionary trends in Secale (Poaceae).

Jianping Zhou; Zujun Yang; Guangrong Li; Cheng Liu; Zongxiang Tang; Yong Zhang; Zheng-Long Ren

Genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) with Secale cereale cv. ‘Jingzhou rye’ DNA as a probe to chromosomes of hexaploid triticale line Fenzhi-1 revealed that not only were all chromosomes of rye strongly hybridized along the entire chromosome length, but there were also stronger signals in terminal or subtelomeric regions. This pattern of hybridization signals is referred to as GISH banding. After GISH banding, sequential fluorescene in situ hybridizaion (FISH) with tandem repeated sequence pSc200 and pSc250 as probes showed that the chromosomal distribution of pSc200 is highly coincident with the GISH banding pattern, suggesting that GISH banding revealed chromosomal distribution of pSc200 in rye. In addition, FISH using pSc200 and pSc250 as probes to chromosomes of 11 species of the genus Secale and two artificial amphiploids (Triticum aestivum-S. strictum subsp. africanum amphiploid and Aegilops tauschii-S. silvestre amphiploid) showed that (1) the chromosomal distribution of pSc200 and pSc250 differed greatly in Secale species, and the trend towards an increase in pSc200 and pSc250 binding sites from wild species to cultivated rye suggested that pSc200 and pSc250 sequences gradually accumulated during Secale evolution; (2) the chromosomal distribution of pSc200 and pSc250 presented polymorphism on homologous chromosomes, suggesting that the same species has two heterogeneous homologous chromosomes; (3) the intensity and number of hybridization signals varied differently on chromosomes between pSc200 and pSc250, suggesting that each repetitive family evolved independently.


Journal of Applied Genetics | 2009

Isolation and chromosomal distribution of a novel Ty1-copia-like sequence from Secale, which enables identification of wheat-Secale africanum introgression lines.

J. Jia; Zujun Yang; Guangrong Li; Ch. Liu; M. Lei; T. Zhang; J. Zhou; Z. Ren

A repetitive sequence of 411 bp, named pSaO5411, was identified in theSecale africanum genome (Ra) by random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) analysis of wheat and wheat—S. africanum amphiploids. GenBank BLAST search revealed that the sequence of pSaO5411 was highly homologous to a part of a Ty1-copia retrotransposon. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analyses indicated that pSaO5411 was significantly hybridized toS. africanum chromosomes of a wheat—S. africanum amphiploid, and it was dispersed along theSecale chromosome arms except the terminal regions. Basing on the sequence of pSaO5411, a pair of sequence-characterized amplified region (SCAR) primers were designed, and the resultant SCAR marker was able to target both cultivated rye and the wildSecale species, which also enabled to identify effectively theS. africanum chromatin introduced into the wheat genome.


Journal of Genetics | 2014

New St-chromosome-specific molecular markers for identifying wheat–Thinopyrum intermedium derivative lines

Lijun Hu; Guangrong Li; Haixian Zhan; Cheng Liu; Zujun Yang

Many grass species in Triticeae serve as important gene pools for forage and cereal crops breeding. Extensive natural and artificial interspecific hybridization have given rise to different ploidy of Triticeae species (Wang et al. 1994). The St genome was defined in diploid Pseudoroegneria species, and is a donor genome of at least seven genera including Douglasdeweya, Roegneria, Elytrigia, Thinopyrum, Elymus, Kengyilia and Pascopyrum according to different taxonomic systems (Wang et al. 1994; Yen et al. 2005). In the past decades, numerous studies on species containing St-chromosome were focussed on genomic relationship and molecular phylogeny based on molecular markers including chloroplast DNA, high-copy nuclear genes, singlecopy nuclear genes, as well as genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) (Kellogg and Appels 1995; Mason-Gamer et al. 2002; Mason-Gamer 2005). Among these species, Thinopyrum intermedium with genome constitution of E1E2St (Wang et al. 1994) or JJsSt (Chen et al. 1998) was widely used in wheat breeding programme (Chen 2005; Li and Wang 2009). Molecular markers, particularly genome-specific markers, are useful in identifying the genome constitution of the unknown species, and also provide efficient tools to check the target alien genes transferred to wheat (Schwarzacher et al. 1992; Wang et al. 2010). Only a few St-chromosomespecific RFLP (Zhang et al. 2001), SCAR (Liu et al. 2007) and ISSR (Zeng et al. 2008) markers were developed to identify genome composition and the individual St-chromosomes. However, the most available markers are lacking in information on the corresponding homologous linkage group relative to wheat. Based on the orthologous gene conservation between rice and wheat, Ishikawa et al. (2007) reported an array of PCR-

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Guangrong Li

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Cheng Liu

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Zheng-Long Ren

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Jianping Zhou

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Juan Feng

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Tao Lang

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Haixian Zhan

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Liu C

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Zi-Xian Zeng

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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