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Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Assessment Of Grain Safety In Developing Nations, Jose R. Mendoza Dec 2020

Assessment Of Grain Safety In Developing Nations, Jose R. Mendoza

Department of Food Science and Technology: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

Grains are the most widely consumed foods worldwide, with maize (Zea mays) being frequently consumed in developing countries where it feeds approximately 900 million people under the poverty line of 2 USD per day. While grain handling practices are acceptable in most developed nations, many developing nations still face challenges such as inadequate field management, drying, and storage. Faulty grain handling along with unavoidably humid climates result in recurrent fungal growth and spoilage, which compromises both the end-quality and safety of the harvest. This becomes particularly problematic where there is little awareness about health risks associated with poor …


Polerovirus Genomic Variation And Mechanisms Of Silencing Suppression By P0 Protein, Natalie Holste Nov 2020

Polerovirus Genomic Variation And Mechanisms Of Silencing Suppression By P0 Protein, Natalie Holste

School of Biological Sciences: Dissertations, Theses, and Student Research

The family Luteoviridae consists of three genera: Luteovirus, Enamovirus, and Polerovirus. The genus Polerovirus contains 32 virus species. All are transmitted by aphids and can infect a wide variety of crops from cereals and wheat to cucurbits and peppers. However, little is known about how this wide range of hosts and vectors developed. In poleroviruses, aphid transmission and virion formation is mediated by the coat protein read-through domain (CPRT) while silencing suppression and phloem limitation is mediated by Protein 0 (P0)—a protein unique to poleroviruses. P0 gives poleroviruses a great advantage amongst plant viruses and diversifies polerovirus species, but the …


Dct4—A New Member Of The Dicarboxylate Transporter Family In C4 Grasse, Sarit Weissmann, Pu Huang, Madeline A. Wiechert, Koki Furuyama, Thomas P. Brutnell, Mitsutaka Taniguchi, James C. Schnable, Todd C. Mockler Nov 2020

Dct4—A New Member Of The Dicarboxylate Transporter Family In C4 Grasse, Sarit Weissmann, Pu Huang, Madeline A. Wiechert, Koki Furuyama, Thomas P. Brutnell, Mitsutaka Taniguchi, James C. Schnable, Todd C. Mockler

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Malate transport shuttles atmospheric carbon into the Calvin–Benson cycle during NADP-ME C4 photosynthesis. Previous characterizations of several plant dicarboxylate transporters (DCT) showed that they efficiently exchange malate across membranes. Here, we identify and characterize a previously unknown member of the DCT family, DCT4, in Sorghum bicolor. We show that SbDCT4 exchangesmalateacrossmembranesanditsexpressionpatternisconsistentwitharoleinmalatetransportduringC4 photosynthesis. SbDCT4 is not syntenic to the characterized photosynthetic gene ZmDCT2, and an ortholog is not detectable in the maize reference genome. We found that the expression patterns of DCT family genes in the leaves of Zea mays, and S. bicolor varied by cell type. Our results suggest that …


Dynamic Transcriptomic And Phosphoproteomic Analysis During Cell Wall Stress In Aspergillus Nidulans, Cynthia Chelius, Walker Huso, Samantha Reese, Alexander Doan, Stephen Lincoln, Kelsi Lawson, Boa Tran, Raj Purohit, Trevor Glaros, Ranjan Srivastava, Steven D. Harris, Mark R. Marten May 2020

Dynamic Transcriptomic And Phosphoproteomic Analysis During Cell Wall Stress In Aspergillus Nidulans, Cynthia Chelius, Walker Huso, Samantha Reese, Alexander Doan, Stephen Lincoln, Kelsi Lawson, Boa Tran, Raj Purohit, Trevor Glaros, Ranjan Srivastava, Steven D. Harris, Mark R. Marten

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

The fungal cell-wall integrity signaling (CWIS) pathway regulates cellular response to environmental stress to enable wall repair and resumption of normal growth. This complex, interconnected, pathway has been only partially characterized in filamentous fungi. To better understand the dynamic cellular response to wall perturbation, a-glucan synthase inhibitor (micafungin) was added to a growing A. nidulans shake-flask culture. From this flask, transcriptomic and phosphoproteomic data were acquired over 10 and 120 min, respectively. To differentiate statistically-significant dynamic behavior from noise, a multivariate adaptive regression splines (MARS) model was applied to both data sets. Over 1800 genes were dynamically expressed and over …


Smrt Sequencing Of Paramecium Bursaria Chlorella Virus-1 Reveals Diverse Methylation Stability In Adenines Targeted By Restriction Modification Systems, Samantha R. Coy, Eric R. Gann, Spiridon E. Papoulis, Michael E. Holder, Nadim J. Ajami, Joseph F. Petrosino, Erik R. Zinser, James L. Van Etten, Steven W. Wilhelm May 2020

Smrt Sequencing Of Paramecium Bursaria Chlorella Virus-1 Reveals Diverse Methylation Stability In Adenines Targeted By Restriction Modification Systems, Samantha R. Coy, Eric R. Gann, Spiridon E. Papoulis, Michael E. Holder, Nadim J. Ajami, Joseph F. Petrosino, Erik R. Zinser, James L. Van Etten, Steven W. Wilhelm

James Van Etten Publications

Chloroviruses (family Phycodnaviridae) infect eukaryotic, freshwater, unicellular green algae. A unique feature of these viruses is an abundance of DNA methyltransferases, with isolates dedicating up to 4.5% of their protein coding potential to these genes. This diversity highlights just one of the long-standing values of the chlorovirus model system; where group-wide epigenomic characterization might begin to elucidate the function(s) of DNA methylation in large dsDNA viruses. We characterized DNA modifications in the prototype chlorovirus, PBCV-1, using single-molecule real time (SMRT) sequencing (aka PacBio). Results were compared to total available sites predicted in silico based on DNA sequence alone. SMRT-software detected …


Fungicide Sensitivity Of Sclerotinia Sclerotiorum Isolates From Five States With Different Fungicide Treatments, Cristian Wulkop Gil, Edgar Nieto-Lopez, Sydney Everhart Apr 2020

Fungicide Sensitivity Of Sclerotinia Sclerotiorum Isolates From Five States With Different Fungicide Treatments, Cristian Wulkop Gil, Edgar Nieto-Lopez, Sydney Everhart

UCARE Research Products

Sclerotinia sclerotiorum is a plant pathogenic fungus that causes a disease called white mold that can infect more than 450 plant species including soybeans, dry beans, green beans, canola, and sunflower. This pathogen is capable of up to $252M in losses every year (U.S. Canola Association, 2014). Fungicides are widely used in developed agricultural systems to control disease. However, resistance to the most effective fungicides has emerged and spread in pathogen populations and there have been multiple reports of S. sclerotiorum isolates becoming resistant to certain fungicides. Since different fields in different states use different fungicide treatments on plants and …


Mechanisms Of Silencing Suppression By A Polerovirus P0 Protein, Natalie Holste, Hernan Garcia-Ruiz Apr 2020

Mechanisms Of Silencing Suppression By A Polerovirus P0 Protein, Natalie Holste, Hernan Garcia-Ruiz

School of Biological Sciences: Posters and Presentations

Maize lethal necrosis is an intense viral disease spreading across sub-Saharan Africa. Maize is the staple crop grown in sub-Saharan Africa, but most crops infected with maize lethal necrosis will not survive to harvest. This causes immense economic hardship and starvation within the population. Maize lethal necrosis consists of a combination of two viruses, Maize chlorotic mottle virus (MCMV) and a virus from the genus potyvirus. In a recent study, a Maize yellow dwarf virus-RMV (MYDV-RMV)-like polerovirus, was repeatedly detected in plants with maize lethal necrosis. Poleroviruses have a silencing suppressor, P0 protein, and the mechanism of suppression is poorly …


Fungicide Sensitivity Of Sclerotinia Sclerotiorum Isolates Selected From Five Different States That Use Different Fungicide Treatments, Cristian Wulkop Gil Apr 2020

Fungicide Sensitivity Of Sclerotinia Sclerotiorum Isolates Selected From Five Different States That Use Different Fungicide Treatments, Cristian Wulkop Gil

UCARE Research Products

Sclerotinia sclerotiorum is a plant pathogenic fungus that causes a disease called white mold that can infect more than 450 plant species including soybeans, dry beans, green beans, canola, and sunflower. This pathogen is capable of up to $252M in losses every year (U.S. Canola Association, 2014). Fungicides are widely used in developed agricultural systems to control disease. However, resistance to the most effective fungicides has emerged and spread in pathogen populations and there have been multiple reports of S. sclerotiorum isolates becoming resistant to certain fungicides. Since different fields in different states use different fungicide treatments on plants and …


Proceedings Of The 47th Annual Meeting, Southern Soybean Disease Workers (March 4-5, 2020, Pensacola Beach, Florida), Burton H. Bluhm, Carl Bradley, Tom W. Allen, Danise Beadle, Trey Price Mar 2020

Proceedings Of The 47th Annual Meeting, Southern Soybean Disease Workers (March 4-5, 2020, Pensacola Beach, Florida), Burton H. Bluhm, Carl Bradley, Tom W. Allen, Danise Beadle, Trey Price

Southern Soybean Disease Workers: Conference Proceedings

Contents

Southern United States soybean disease loss estimates for 2019. TW Allen, K Bissonnette, CA Bradley, JP Damicone, NS Dufault, TR Faske, T Isakeit, RC Kemerait, A Koehler, HL Mehl, JD Mueller, GB Padgett, PP Price, EJ Sikora, IM Small, L Thiessen, and H Young

Abstracts of presented papers

Fungicide efficacy on target spot in Tennessee soybean. Ty Smith, H Kelly, and Z Hansen

Temporal dynamics of Neohydatothrips variabilis, Frankliniella tritici, and Frankliniella fusca in South Central Wisconsin and the occurrence of Soybean vein necrosis virus. Cristina Zambrana-Echevarria, S Kaplan, RL Groves, and DL Smith

Population distributions and …


Principles, Applications, And Biosafety Of Plant Genome Editing Using Crispr-Cas9, Kaoutar El-Mounadi, María Luisa Morales-Floriano, Hernan Garcia-Ruiz Jan 2020

Principles, Applications, And Biosafety Of Plant Genome Editing Using Crispr-Cas9, Kaoutar El-Mounadi, María Luisa Morales-Floriano, Hernan Garcia-Ruiz

Department of Plant Pathology: Faculty Publications

The terms genome engineering, genome editing, and gene editing, refer to modifications (insertions, deletions, substitutions) in the genome of a living organism. The most widely used approach to genome editing nowadays is based on Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats and associated protein 9 (CRISPR-Cas9). In prokaryotes, CRISPR-Cas9 is an adaptive immune system that naturally protects cells from DNA virus infections. CRISPR-Cas9 has been modified to create a versatile genome editing technology that has a wide diversity of applications in medicine, agriculture, and basic studies of gene functions. CRISPR-Cas9 has been used in a growing number of monocot and dicot …


Variation Profile Of The Orthotospovirus Genome, Deepti Nigam, Hernan Garcia Ruiz Jan 2020

Variation Profile Of The Orthotospovirus Genome, Deepti Nigam, Hernan Garcia Ruiz

Department of Plant Pathology: Faculty Publications

Orthotospoviruses are plant-infecting members of the family Tospoviridae (order Bunyavirales), have a broad host range and are vectored by polyphagous thrips in a circulative- propagative manner. Because diverse hosts and vectors impose heterogeneous selection constraints on viral genomes, the evolutionary arms races between hosts and their pathogens might be manifested as selection for rapid changes in key genes. These observations suggest that orthotospoviruses contain key genetic components that rapidly mutate to mediate host adaptation and vector transmission. Using complete genome sequences, we profiled genomic variation in orthotospoviruses. Results show that the three genomic segments contain hypervariable areas at homologous locations …


Mutations In Virus-Derived Small Rnas, Deepti Nigam, Katherine Latourrette, Hernan Garcia Ruiz Jan 2020

Mutations In Virus-Derived Small Rnas, Deepti Nigam, Katherine Latourrette, Hernan Garcia Ruiz

Department of Plant Pathology: Faculty Publications

RNA viruses exist as populations of genome variants. Virus-infected plants accumulate 21–24 nucleotide small interfering RnAs (siRnAs) derived from viral RnA (virus-derived siRnAs) through gene silencing. This paper describes the profile of mutations in virus-derived siRNAs for three members of the family Potyviridae: Turnip mosaic virus (tuMV), Papaya ringspot virus (pRSV) and Wheat streak mosaic virus (WSMV). for tuMV in Arabidopsis thaliana, profiles were obtained for mechanically inoculated rosette leaves and systemically infected cauline leaves and inflorescence. Results are consistent withselection pressure on the viral genome imposed by local and systemic movement. By genetically removing gene silencing in the plant …


Soybean Nodule-Associated Non-Rhizobial Bacteria Inhibit Plant Pathogens And Induce Growth Promotion In Tomato, Serkan Tokgöz, Dilip K. Lakshman, Mahmoud H. Ghozlan, Hasan Pinar, Daniel P. Roberts, Amitava Mitra Jan 2020

Soybean Nodule-Associated Non-Rhizobial Bacteria Inhibit Plant Pathogens And Induce Growth Promotion In Tomato, Serkan Tokgöz, Dilip K. Lakshman, Mahmoud H. Ghozlan, Hasan Pinar, Daniel P. Roberts, Amitava Mitra

Department of Plant Pathology: Faculty Publications

The root nodules are a unique environment formed on legume roots through a highly specific symbiotic relationship between leguminous plants and nodule-inducing bacteria. Previously, Rhizobia were presumed to be the only group of bacteria residing within nodules. However, recent studies discovered diverse groups of bacteria within the legume nodules. In this report soybean nodule-associated bacteria were studied in an effort to identify beneficial bacteria for plant disease control and growth promotion. Analysis of surface-sterilized single nodules showed bacterial diversity of the nodule microbiome. Five hundred non-rhizobial colonies from 10 nodules, 50 colonies per nodule, were tested individually against the tomato …


Semantic Segmentation Of Sorghum Using Hyperspectral Data Identifies Genetic Associations, Chenyong Miao, Alejandro Pages, Zheng Xu, Eric Rodene, Jinliang Yang, James C. Schnable Jan 2020

Semantic Segmentation Of Sorghum Using Hyperspectral Data Identifies Genetic Associations, Chenyong Miao, Alejandro Pages, Zheng Xu, Eric Rodene, Jinliang Yang, James C. Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

This study describes the evaluation of a range of approaches to semantic segmentation of hyperspectral images of sorghum plants, classifying each pixel as either nonplant or belonging to one of the three organ types (leaf, stalk, panicle). While many current methods for segmentation focus on separating plant pixels from background, organ-specific segmentation makes it feasible to measure a wider range of plant properties. Manually scored training data for a set of hyperspectral images collected from a sorghum association population was used to train and evaluate a set of supervised classification models. Many algorithms show acceptable accuracy for this classification task. …


Advances In Plant Phenomics: From Data And Algorithms To Biological Insights, Sunil Kumar Kenchanmane Raju, Addie M. Thompson, James Schnable Jan 2020

Advances In Plant Phenomics: From Data And Algorithms To Biological Insights, Sunil Kumar Kenchanmane Raju, Addie M. Thompson, James Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

The measurement of the characteristics of living organisms is referred to as phenotyping (Singh et al., 2016). While the use of phenotyping in plant biology and genetics can be traced back at least to Gregor Mendel sorting and counting peas by shape and pod color 160 years ago, addressing current questions in plant biology, genetics, and breeding often requires increasingly precise phenotyping of a wide range of traits. Accurate phenotyping has played a role in both novel discoveries about the fundamental biology of plants and the development of improved crop varieties around the world. With the advent of inexpensive genotyping …


Non-Homology-Based Prediction Of Gene Functions In Maize (Zea Mays Ssp. Mays), Xiuru Dai, Zheng Xu, Zhikai Liang, Xiaoyu Tu, Silin Zhong, James Schnable, Pinghua Li Jan 2020

Non-Homology-Based Prediction Of Gene Functions In Maize (Zea Mays Ssp. Mays), Xiuru Dai, Zheng Xu, Zhikai Liang, Xiaoyu Tu, Silin Zhong, James Schnable, Pinghua Li

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Advances in genome sequencing and annotation have eased the difficulty of identifying new gene sequences. Predicting the functions of these newly identified genes remains challenging. Genes descended from a common ancestral sequence are likely to have common functions.As a result, homology is widely used for gene function prediction. This means functional annotation errors also propagate from one species to another. Several approaches based on machine learning classification algorithms were evaluated for their ability to accurately predict gene function from non-homology gene features. Among the eight supervised classification algorithms evaluated, random forest-based prediction consistently provided the most accurate gene function prediction. …


Voxel Carving-Based 3d Reconstruction Of Sorghum Identifies Genetic Determinants Of Light Interception Efficiency, Mathieu Gaillard, Chenyong Miao, James C. Schnable, Bedrich Benes Jan 2020

Voxel Carving-Based 3d Reconstruction Of Sorghum Identifies Genetic Determinants Of Light Interception Efficiency, Mathieu Gaillard, Chenyong Miao, James C. Schnable, Bedrich Benes

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Changes in canopy architecture traits have been shown to contribute to yield in- creases. Optimizing both light interception and light interception efficiency of agri- cultural crop canopies will be essential to meeting the growing food needs. Canopy architecture is inherently three-dimensional (3D), but many approaches to measuring canopy architecture component traits treat the canopy as a two-dimensional (2D) structure to make large scale measurement, selective breeding, and gene identifi- cation logistically feasible. We develop a high throughput voxel carving strategy to reconstruct 3D representations of sorghum from a small number of RGB photos. Our approach builds on the voxel carving …


Compounds For Increasing Lipid Synthesis And Storage, Concetta Dirusso, Nishikant Wase Jan 2020

Compounds For Increasing Lipid Synthesis And Storage, Concetta Dirusso, Nishikant Wase

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

This invention relates to methods for increasing lipid accumulation and lipid production in cells. Methods of producing biofuel from cells and preparing nutraceuticals comprising lipids produced according to a method provided herein are also provided.


Non-Homology-Based Prediction Of Gene Functions In Maize (Zea Mays Ssp. Mays), Xiuru Dai, Zheng Xu, Zhikai Liang, Xiaoyu Tu, Silin Zhong, James C. Schnable, Pinghua Li Jan 2020

Non-Homology-Based Prediction Of Gene Functions In Maize (Zea Mays Ssp. Mays), Xiuru Dai, Zheng Xu, Zhikai Liang, Xiaoyu Tu, Silin Zhong, James C. Schnable, Pinghua Li

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Advances in genome sequencing and annotation have eased the difficulty of identifying new gene sequences. Predicting the functions of these newly identified genes remains challenging. Genes descended from a common ancestral sequence are likely to have common functions. As a result, homology is widely used for gene function pre- diction. This means functional annotation errors also propagate from one species to another. Several approaches based on machine learning classification algorithms were evaluated for their ability to accurately predict gene function from non-homology gene features. Among the eight supervised classification algorithms evaluated, random- forest-based prediction consistently provided the most accurate gene …


Advances In Plant Phenomics: From Data And Algorithms To Biological Insights, Sunil K. Kenchanmane Raju, Addie M. Thompson, James Schnable Jan 2020

Advances In Plant Phenomics: From Data And Algorithms To Biological Insights, Sunil K. Kenchanmane Raju, Addie M. Thompson, James Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

The measurement of the characteristics of living organisms is re- ferred to as phenotyping (Singh et al., 2016). While the use of phe- notyping in plant biology and genetics can be traced back at least to Gregor Mendel sorting and counting peas by shape and pod color 160 years ago, addressing current questions in plant biology, genet- ics, and breeding often requires increasingly precise phenotyping of a wide range of traits. Accurate phenotyping has played a role in both novel discoveries about the fundamental biology of plants and the development of improved crop varieties around the world. With the advent …


Metabolic Profiles Of Six African Cultivars Of Cassava (Manihot Esculenta Crantz) Highlight Bottlenecks Of Root Yield, Toshihiro Obata, Patrick A.W. Klemens, Laise Rosado-Souza, Armin Schlereth, Andreas Gisel, Livia Stavolone, Wolfgang Zierer, Nicolas Morales, Lukas A. Mueller, Samuel C. Zeeman, Frank Ludewig, Mark State, Uwe Sonnewald, H. Ekkehard Neuhaus, Alisdair R. Femie Jan 2020

Metabolic Profiles Of Six African Cultivars Of Cassava (Manihot Esculenta Crantz) Highlight Bottlenecks Of Root Yield, Toshihiro Obata, Patrick A.W. Klemens, Laise Rosado-Souza, Armin Schlereth, Andreas Gisel, Livia Stavolone, Wolfgang Zierer, Nicolas Morales, Lukas A. Mueller, Samuel C. Zeeman, Frank Ludewig, Mark State, Uwe Sonnewald, H. Ekkehard Neuhaus, Alisdair R. Femie

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Cassava is an important staple crop in sub-Saharan Africa, due to its high productivity even on nutrient poor soils. The metabolic characteristics underlying this high productivity are poorly understood including the mode of photosynthesis, reasons for the high rate of photosynthesis, the extent of source/sink limitation, the impact of environment, and the extent of variation between cultivars. Six commercial African cassava cultivars were grown in a greenhouse in Erlangen, Germany, and in the field in Ibadan, Nigeria. Source leaves, sink leaves, stems and storage roots were harvested during storage root bulking and analyzed for sugars, organic acids, amino acids, phosphorylated …


Increased Power And Accuracy Of Causal Locus Identification In Time Series Genome-Wide Association In Sorghum1[Open], Chenyong Miao, Yuhang Xu, Sanzhen Liu, Patrick S. Schnable, James C. Schnable Jan 2020

Increased Power And Accuracy Of Causal Locus Identification In Time Series Genome-Wide Association In Sorghum1[Open], Chenyong Miao, Yuhang Xu, Sanzhen Liu, Patrick S. Schnable, James C. Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

The phenotypes of plants develop over time and change in response to the environment. New engineering and computer vision technologies track these phenotypic changes. Identifying the genetic loci regulating differences in the pattern of phenotypic change remains challenging. This study used functional principal component analysis (FPCA) to achieve this aim. Time series phenotype data were collected from a sorghum (Sorghum bicolor) diversity panel using a number of technologies including conventional color photography and hyperspectral imaging. This imaging lasted for 37 d and centered on reproductive transition. A new higher density marker set was generated for the same population. Several genes …


Draft Genome Assembly Of Passalora Sequoiae A Needle Blight Pathogen On Leyland Cypress, Warren E. Copes, Jorge Ibarra Caballero, Ebrahiem Babiker, Jane E. Stewart, Valerie A. Orner, Alan S. Windham, Renee Arias Jan 2020

Draft Genome Assembly Of Passalora Sequoiae A Needle Blight Pathogen On Leyland Cypress, Warren E. Copes, Jorge Ibarra Caballero, Ebrahiem Babiker, Jane E. Stewart, Valerie A. Orner, Alan S. Windham, Renee Arias

United States Department of Agriculture-Agricultural Research Service / University of Nebraska-Lincoln: Faculty Publications

Objective: Passalora sequoiae (family Mycosphaerellaceae) causes a twig blight on Leyland cypress that requires numerous fungicide applications annually to minimize economic losses for ornamental plant nursery and Christmas tree producers. The objective was to generate a high-quality draft assembly of the genome of P. sequoiae as a resource for primer development to investigate genotype diversity. Data description: We report here the genome sequence of P. sequoiae 9LC2 that was isolated from Leyland cypress ‘Leighton Green’ in 2017 in southern Mississippi, USA. The draft genome was obtained using Pacific Biosciences (PacBio) SMRT and Illumina HiSeq 2500 sequencing. Illumina reads were mapped …


A Global Database Of Soil Nematode Abundance And Functional Group Composition, Johan Van Den Hoogen, Stefan Geisen, Thomas W. Crowther, Peter Mullin, Many Co-Authors Jan 2020

A Global Database Of Soil Nematode Abundance And Functional Group Composition, Johan Van Den Hoogen, Stefan Geisen, Thomas W. Crowther, Peter Mullin, Many Co-Authors

Department of Plant Pathology: Faculty Publications

As the most abundant animals on earth, nematodes are a dominant component of the soil community. They play critical roles in regulating biogeochemical cycles and vegetation dynamics within and across landscapes and are an indicator of soil biological activity. Here, we present a comprehensive global dataset of soil nematode abundance and functional group composition. This dataset includes 6,825 georeferenced soil samples from all continents and biomes. For geospatial mapping purposes these samples are aggregated into 1,933 unique 1-km pixels, each of which is linked to 73 global environmental covariate data layers. Altogether, this dataset can help to gain insight into …


Leaf Angle Extractor: A High-Throughput Image Processing Framework For Leaf Angle Measurements In Maize And Sorghum, Sunil Kumar Kenchanmane Raju, Miles Adkins, Alex Enersen, Daniel Santana De Carvalho, Anthony J. Studer, Baskar Ganapathysubramanian, Patrick S. Schnable, James C. Schnable Jan 2020

Leaf Angle Extractor: A High-Throughput Image Processing Framework For Leaf Angle Measurements In Maize And Sorghum, Sunil Kumar Kenchanmane Raju, Miles Adkins, Alex Enersen, Daniel Santana De Carvalho, Anthony J. Studer, Baskar Ganapathysubramanian, Patrick S. Schnable, James C. Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

PREMISE: Maize yields have significantly increased over the past half-century owing to advances in breeding and agronomic practices. Plants have been grown in increasingly higher densities due to changes in plant architecture resulting in plants with more upright leaves, which allows more efficient light interception for photosynthesis. Natural variation for leaf angle has been identified in maize and sorghum using multiple mapping populations. However, conventional phenotyping techniques for leaf angle are low throughput and labor intensive, and therefore hinder a mechanistic understanding of how the leaf angle of individual leaves changes over time in response to the environment.

METHODS …


Plant Segmentation By Supervised Machine Learning Methods, Jason Adams, Yumou Qiu, Yuhang Xu, James C. Schnable Jan 2020

Plant Segmentation By Supervised Machine Learning Methods, Jason Adams, Yumou Qiu, Yuhang Xu, James C. Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

High-throughput phenotyping systems provide abundant data for statistical analysis through plant imaging. Before usable data can be obtained, image processing must take place. In this study, we used supervised learning methods to segment plants from the background in such images and compared them with commonly used thresholding methods. Because obtaining accurate training data is a major obstacle to using supervised learning methods for segmentation, a novel approach to producing accurate labels was developed. We demonstrated that, with careful selection of training data through such an approach, supervised learning methods, and neural networks in particular, can outperform thresholding methods at segmentation.


Interspecific Analysis Of Diurnal Gene Regulation In Panicoid Grasses Identifies Known And Novel Regulatory Motifs, Xianjun Lai, Claire Bendix, Lang Yan, Yang Zhang, James C. Schnable, Frank G. Harmon Jan 2020

Interspecific Analysis Of Diurnal Gene Regulation In Panicoid Grasses Identifies Known And Novel Regulatory Motifs, Xianjun Lai, Claire Bendix, Lang Yan, Yang Zhang, James C. Schnable, Frank G. Harmon

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Background: The circadian clock drives endogenous 24-h rhythms that allow organisms to adapt and prepare for predictable and repeated changes in their environment throughout the day-night (diurnal) cycle. Many components of the circadian clock in Arabidopsis thaliana have been functionally characterized, but comparatively little is known about circadian clocks in grass species including major crops like maize and sorghum.

Results: Comparative research based on protein homology and diurnal gene expression patterns suggests the function of some predicted clock components in grasses is conserved with their Arabidopsis counterparts, while others have diverged in function. Our analysis of diurnal gene expression in …


Leaf Angle Extractor: A High-Throughput Image Processing Framework For Leaf Angle Measurements In Maize And Sorghum, Sunil Kumar Kenchanmane Raju, Miles Adkins, Alex Enersen, Daniel Santana De Carvalho, Anthony J. Studer, Baskar Ganapathysubramanian, Patrick Schnable, James C. Schnable Jan 2020

Leaf Angle Extractor: A High-Throughput Image Processing Framework For Leaf Angle Measurements In Maize And Sorghum, Sunil Kumar Kenchanmane Raju, Miles Adkins, Alex Enersen, Daniel Santana De Carvalho, Anthony J. Studer, Baskar Ganapathysubramanian, Patrick Schnable, James C. Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

PREMISE: Maize yields have significantly increased over the past half-century owing to advances in breeding and agronomic practices. Plants have been grown in increasingly higher densities due to changes in plant architecture resulting in plants with more upright leaves, which allows more efficient light interception for photosynthesis. Natural variation for leaf angle has been identified in maize and sorghum using multiple mapping populations. However, conventional phenotyping techniques for leaf angle are low throughput and labor intensive, and therefore hinder a mechanistic understanding of how the leaf angle of individual leaves changes over time in response to the environment.

METHODS: High-throughput …


Isoseq Transcriptome Assembly Of C3 Panicoid Grasses Provides Tools To Study Evolutionary Change In The Panicoideae, Daniel S. Carvalho, Aime V. Nishimwe, James C. Schnable Jan 2020

Isoseq Transcriptome Assembly Of C3 Panicoid Grasses Provides Tools To Study Evolutionary Change In The Panicoideae, Daniel S. Carvalho, Aime V. Nishimwe, James C. Schnable

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

The number of plant species with genomic and transcriptomic data has been increasing rapidly. The grasses—Poaceae—have been well represented among species with published reference genomes. However, as a result the genomes of wild grasses are less frequently targeted by sequencing efforts. Sequence data from wild relatives of crop species in the grasses can aid the study of domestication, gene discovery for breeding and crop improvement, and improve our understanding of the evolution of C4 photosynthesis. Here, we used long-read sequencing technology to characterize the transcriptomes of three C3 panicoid grass species: Dichanthelium oligosanthes, Chasmanthium laxum, and …


Oxidosqualene Cyclases Involved In The Biosynthesis Of Triterpenoids In Quercus Suber Cork, Lucas Busta, Olga Serra, Ok Tae Kim, Marisa Molinas, Irene Peré-Fossoul, Mercè Figueras, Reinhard Jetter Jan 2020

Oxidosqualene Cyclases Involved In The Biosynthesis Of Triterpenoids In Quercus Suber Cork, Lucas Busta, Olga Serra, Ok Tae Kim, Marisa Molinas, Irene Peré-Fossoul, Mercè Figueras, Reinhard Jetter

Center for Plant Science Innovation: Faculty and Staff Publications

Cork is a water-impermeable, suberin-based material harboring lignin, (hemi)cellulose, and extractable small molecules (primarily triterpenoids). Extractables strongly influence the properties of suberin-based materials. Though these previous findings suggest a key role for triterpenoids in cork material quality, directly testing this idea is hindered in part because it is not known which genes control cork triterpenoid biosynthesis. Here, we used gas chromatography and mass spectrometry to determine that the majority (>85%) of non-polar extractables from cork were pentacyclic triterpenoids, primarily betulinic acid, friedelin, and hydroxy-friedelin. In other plants, triterpenoids are generated by oxidosqualene cyclases (OSCs). Accordingly, we mined Quercus suber …