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Plant Physiol, March 2001, Vol. 125, pp. 1191-1197
UPDATE ON GRASS GENOMICS
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INTRODUCTION |
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Grasses are a large, diverse, and
successful family of monocotyledonous flowering plants characterized
most dramatically by their spikelet style of floral structure (Fig.
1a) and by the number and pattern of
these spikelets in the inflorescence. There are about 10,000 species
that are categorized as grasses by taxonomists who traditionally follow
embryonic, architectural, and anatomical characters (e.g. Clayton and
Renvoize, 1986
). More recent comparative DNA sequence information
confirms that all grasses examined to date did indeed diverge from one
common ancestral population of "grass alleles" and are distinct
from the nearest non-grass family, the Joinvilleaceae. In
general, the taxonomic distinction within the grasses continuously
divides these species into subfamilies, supertribes, tribes, subtribes,
genera, species, and subspecies. As additional species have been added
to the sequence databases, a phylogenetic trend has emerged. Where
Clayton and Renvoize (1986)
recognized six subfamilies, Kellogg (1998
and refs. therein) recognized 13, and the "in progress" data of the
Grass Phylogenetics Working Group (http://www.ftg.fiu.edu/grass/gpwg)
could be used to justify recognition of at least 16 subfamilies, often
composed of one or a few species. At present the phylogenetic
relationship
the exact branch relationships
among most of these 16 subfamilies is not known, as if they originated in a single grass
adaptive radiation, estimated to be about 70 million years ago
(Kellogg, 1998
and refs. therein). In fact, there is likely one
specific order by which the several grass subfamilies are related, one to another, but sequence-based trees are necessarily quantitative and
often cannot resolve deep branches. Perhaps phylogenetic trees based on
chromosomal breakpoints, not being time-dependent, will fare
better.
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Until about 8 years ago, one grass species maps and mutant collections,
however interesting, did not directly affect research on another grass
species, even though grass genomes were known to be related. This state
of being isolated by commodity changed in 1992-1993. Of particular
notice was the research of Dr. Steven Tanksley and coworkers on gene
order comparisons of maize and rice (Ahn and Tanksley, 1993
) and
Dr. Mike Gale and coworkers and their many international collaborators
who moved from mapping wheat relatives to more distant grasses
(summarized by Moore et al., 1995
). The graphic summary of these
mapping data, greatly simplified, has become popularly known as "The
Circle Diagram" because of a method used to draw the expressed gene
sequence (EST) maps of several different grass species on one radial
axis. A recent Circle Diagram (Gale and Devos, 1998
) includes crop
grass species from four subfamilies: Pooids (wheat and oat), Panicoids (maize, sorghum, sugarcane, and foxtail millet), Oryzoids (rice), and
the Chlorinoids (finger millet). In general, gene probes (ESTs) were
chosen to span entire genomes at intervals of 10 or 20 map units.
Comparative mapping in the grasses has been reviewed recently (Devos
and Gale, 2000
). The general conclusion is that all of the grasses in
the four subfamilies examined have their genes in about the same order
so that one can conclude with confidence that one ancestral genome
remains recognizable in its descendents. The huge differences in DNA
content/haploid genome and the differences in chromosome number seem to
have little or nothing to do with gene number or order. Recent
polyploids, like bread wheat, for example, certainly have multiples of
the ancestral gene number, but even this simple expectation about
polyploids proves to be false for descendents of ancient duplication
events, as will be discussed.
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DEFINITIONS OF MACROCOLINEARITY AND SYNTENY |
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Closely related species within a genus have the same chromosome
numbers unless they are easily recognizable polyploids. It is expected
and proved that the individual genomes in a polyploid series carry the
same number of genes per genome, and that these genes are in the same
order (as in the wheats; cited in Devos and Gale, 2000
), allowing for
the occasional chromosomal aberration (inversion, duplication,
translocation, or deletion of previously duplicated chromosome) as well
as the occasional "mutant." The result is called
"macrocolinearity" because a typical mapping interval is 10 to 20 map units. In a particular rice heterozygotic region including the
adh1 gene, 10 map units is 1.15 Mb and carries 147 potential
genes (Tarchini et al., 2000
). When gene orders, quantified in coarse
mapping intervals, are compared species with species, estimates of
"macrocolinearity" result. If five markers in a row covering 50 map
units also occur in a row on another chromosome, these chromosome
regions are macrocolinear. Often a breakpoint event disconnects this
string of five markers, and colinearity is broken. Such chromosomal
aberrations are expected and are often readily explicable, so another
more generous term, "synteny," is often used to refer to
largely homologous chromosomal segments. Perfect synteny occurs as long
as the ancestral gene order can be reconstructed, and accepts
chromosomal breakpoints, polyploidy, and partial duplications. So,
although closely related species in the same genus do not always
display perfect macrocolinearity, they are syntenous. Comparing more
diverged species brings with it the expectation that more chromosomal
aberrations and gene mutations should occur, and they do (Devos and
Gale, 2000
). The extent of chromosomal aberrations turns out to be
unpredictable. For example, pearl millet and foxtail millet are species
from two closely related genera in the same subtribe, whereas rice is
in a different subfamily than the millets, these being as far apart
genetically as is possible while still being grasses. Foxtail millet
and rice have few (massive) chromosomal aberrations (Devos et al.,
1998
), whereas the two millets have many more major chromosomal rearrangements (Devos et al., 2000
). Even so, the comparative maps are syntenous.
Attempts to demonstrate widespread colinearity between monocots and
dicots have not been successful (Devos et al., 1999
; Bennetzen, 2000
).
The comparison of full genomic sequences between rice and Arabidopsis
should be particularly informative.
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MICROCOLINEARITY |
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Ten map units of a rice chromosome in the adh1 region
carry approximately 147 genes (Tarchini et al., 2000
). Consider the question: is it certain that if a large chromosomal region displays macrocolinearity, then the genes between these markers should also be
approximately colinear? The answer depends on the nature and frequency
of small chromosomal aberrations, those involving one to a few genes,
as compared with the traditional double-strand-break-type aberrations,
and whether these small and large events share the same mechanism. If
individual genes routinely excise and relocate at random in the genome,
then synteny would be lost. Bennetzen (2000)
, in his recent review of
microcolinearity in flowering plants, argues that it is best to compare
all genes in macrocolinear regions of a number of species before
deciding whether macrocolinearity predicts microcolinearity. The first
comparison between such regions in maize and sorghum discovered that
maize carried massive amounts of retrotransposons between its genes,
whereas sorghum did not, and that this difference roughly accounted for
the 5-fold DNA content/genome difference between maize and sorghum
(SanMiguel et al., 1996
). Bennetzen (2000)
measured
microcolinearity in the adh1 region of maize and sorghum,
species that are thought to have diverged about 20 million years ago. A
78-kb genomic sequence of sorghum carrying adh1 was compared
with a potentially homologous adh1-containing maize sequence
roughly five times larger because of retrotransposon filler.
Considerable microcolinearity between maize and sorghum was found. A
conservative estimate might be that eight obvious genes are present in
perfect colinear order and transcriptional direction, and there are two
genes in sorghum that may have no orthologs in the maize sequence.
Tarchini and coworkers (2000)
attempted to compare the
adh1-adh2 region of rice with the Panicoid (maize/sorghum)
sequences, but encountered an apparent translocation just at
Adh1; they did not find and sequence the missing segment. In
the comparable region, considerable microcolinearity was found between
rice and sorghum.
Bennetzen (2000)
reviews all of the other cases of intragrass sequence
comparisons as well, and concludes that microcolinearity seems to be
the rule so far, but there are many apparent exceptions. Bennetzen
discusses mechanisms and selective pressures that could help explain
these exceptions, including the interesting idea that there may be
selection to break colinearity.
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THE IMPORTANCE OF SYNTENY AMONG THE GRASSES |
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If all grass genomes were syntenous, then mapping any character to
any grass gene in the progeny of any grass hybrid
in any of the 10,000 species
would lead to a map position via the rice sequence, and a
deduced array of candidate genes. For example, this mapping might be
between two newly discovered species of grass in a genus about which
nothing is known. So, if any character or QTL (quantitative trait
locus) can be mapped to one map unit, then there would be approximately
15 candidate genes in the region (using the rice estimate as already
discussed). In short, any phene that can be mapped with precision can
be reduced to nucleotide sequence. Synteny must hold if this pan-grass
mapping potential is to be realized. Early data reviewed by Bennetzen
(2000)
are reassuring.
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THE CASE OF THE GIBBERELLIC ACID-INSENSITIVE (GAI) DWARVES IN PLANTS: TOWARD MAPPING IN SILICO |
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GAI dwarves occur in several grasses and in Arabidopsis. The first
sequence was from GAI (Arabidopsis), which was mapped onto maize, the three wheat genomes, and rice. Harberd and coworkers showed
that a GAI ortholog existed in all of these grasses, and four of the positions were coincident with the dwarves that fuelled the
Green Revolution (Peng et al., 1999
). The homologous
gibberellin-insensitive dwarf in barley was added subsequently to the
list of GAI-dwarves (Ivandic et al., 1999
). All
GAIs exist in syntenous positions in grasses. The data on
which these studies were based involved wet-laboratory hybridization
mapping. If the rice sequence had been available, GAIs best
homolog in rice would have anchored this gene to a syntenic region even
though a dwarf is not known to map to this gene in rice. By mapping in
rice, all of the syntenic (orthologous) map positions in maize, wheat,
barley, and all other grasses would have become immediate candidates
for dwarves. All of these dwarves would have been reduced to gene
sequence simultaneously, each controlling the other to generate
unequivocal data, and all would have been accomplished by working with
information only (in silico). It seems likely in the case of
the GAI dwarves in grasses that the knockout phenotype in
maize when it is learned, will also extrapolate to function throughout
the grass family. (The Pioneer Hi-Bred International Company [Des
Moines, IA] operates a maize gene knockout service that will search
their proprietary F1 DNA samples for transposon Mu
insertions between the PCR primer the collaborator sends them and a
Mu transposon, and send out samples of F2 seed so that
one might discover a phenotype caused by the mutant lesion [called
TUSC; Bensen et al., 1995
]. An NSF-funded reverse genetics service,
the Maize Targeted Mutagenesis [MTM] service,
http://mtm.cshl.org, began operation early in 2000.) Most genes are
expected to function similarly in all grasses.
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ON USING "FAMILY" RATHER THAN "SPECIES" AS A MODEL GENETIC SYSTEM |
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By considering individuals in many species related to one another
in a known phylogeny, there is a logical possibility to deduce
important facts about the origin of living designs where design
represents evolution over millions of years by a process of natural
selection of new mutants and new combinations of alleles, as well as
manifold chance events, and perhaps the alleles or combinations of
alleles that encode them. Figure 1 depicts grass flowers, and by no
means covers the full breadth of species diversity. A plethora of
flower branching designs, spikelet numbers, and spikelet arrangements
are shown. Even so, each grass flower, and the spikelet itself, is made
of the same modular segments
with the same organs and organ
components
recognizable even if not elaborated. There is also much
diversity for other characters, some of which are leaf anatomy,
photosynthetic types, epidermal cell-type patterns, venation patterns,
ligule shapes, apomictic style, weediness, and
salt/drought/pest/hypoxia tolerance. Each of these variations was
presumably evolved from a common grass ancestor (see Bennetzen and
Freeling, 1998
).
Figure 2 (Kellogg, 1998
) shows a very
minimized (four subfamilies) phylogenetic tree of the grasses, with a
single character mapped upon this tree. This character, called
"C-value," is the amount of DNA in the pre-replication, diploid,
mitotic nucleus of the species identified. The subfamilies to which
these species belong are marked on the right. Some common ancestors are
identified by arrows in front of deduced 2C values; these notations
constitute a possible model for the evolution of C-value in these
grasses. The general conclusion from this study is that C-value can
increase or decrease over evolutionary time. Increases in C-value are
seen in the Pooids and the Zea/Tripsicum branches of the
Panicoids. Decreases are particularly clear in the genus
Corynephorus. Obvious mechanical hypotheses, probably
involving retrotransposons (SanMiguel et al., 1996
), can be formulated
and tested on the basis of the phylogenetic data of Figure 2.
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CONVERGENCE IN A PHYLOGENETIC TREE MARKS AN EXPERIMENTAL OPPORTUNITY |
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Because DNA content is a continuous character, no branch in the
tree in Figure 2 demonstrates an origin of novelty. The informative lineages of Figure 2 are those demonstrating convergence. For example,
that rice and a Corynephorous have low DNA/genome content is
not because of lineage (which would make the characters homologous), but convergence. The mechanism of lowering genome size rapidly within
an otherwise high DNA content lineage is of obvious interest specifically because it is able to adapt or change. Even more useful
experimentally are cases of convergence that happen between more
closely related species, implying rapid evolution. The most useful
cases of convergence occur between subspecies, or species that can
still cross pollinate to make fertile hybrids, or in the rapid process
of domestication. Such convergences must have occurred quickly, and
involve one or a few alleles, and the wide hybrid would permit mapping
of these alleles as QTLs. Every character that is polymorphic in the
grasses
apomixis, Kranz anatomy, and the others listed
previously-display convergences. Geographies where unfilled niches
appeared quickly, as with islands, or where the environment is marginal
to grass life, as with sand dunes or thermal pools, are especially good
places to search for convergences. Each convergence constitutes a rapid
evolutionary adaptation involving one or a few alleles, and each is a
case study in the "genetic engineering" of useful phenotype. Often
a particular character or adaptation such as short generation time,
perennial habit, C4 photosynthesis, and aposporic apomixis occurs
multiple times in a lineage. To what extent such "repeating"
characters are convergent (truly of genetically independent origin) or
divergent (at least partially sharing the genetic capacity to evolve a
character) can make matters academically confusing. Speaking
practically, if the character can be mapped, there is a good chance the
character can be reduced to DNA sequences.
Using "grasses as a single genetic system" logic, Paterson and
coworkers (1995)
were able to explain the convergence of domestication traits, those selected by indigenous breeders, in the cereal grasses by
showing that mutant alleles of a small set of grass genes were involved.
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THE GRASS HYBRIDS DATABASE: HTTP://128.32.88.35/GRASSWEB/ |
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Why does hybridization sometimes occur between different species or between species in different genera? The domesticated races of wild species are often classed as different species by taxonomists, although domesticated and wild species can effectively cross. The explanation is obvious: The taxonomists were fooled by convergences caused by human selection. Some genera such as the Festuca-Lolium complex of species are famous for wide crosses that yield fertile hybrids; other subtribes exhibit no such propensity. There are approximately 4,000 hybrids, mostly infertile, identified and referenced in the grass hybrids database (http://128.32.88.35/grassweb), and there are certainly many more hybrids known, but not yet reported.
The point of the grass hybrids database is to facilitate discovery of
individual fertile hybrids that are heterozygous for alleles specifying
profound character differences. Such profound character differences
result from convergence or perhaps, hopefully, the evolution of a truly
novel phene. Given this hybrid, QTL mapping of alleles to pan-grass
markers should automatically generate candidate genes from the fully
sequenced anchor genome (this genome is rice for the grass family). The
best support for this approach (Lan and Paterson, 2000
) is the recent
success at mapping QTLs important for "sculpting the curd," the
unique flower arrangement of broccoli, for example, in the
Brassica family of dicots, using Arabidopsis as the anchor
genome from which candidate genes are drawn.
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REALLY WIDE CROSSES BETWEEN GRASSES: CHROMOSOME ADDITION LINES |
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There have been attempts to cross grass species in different
subfamilies, species diverged to about as far as one can get within the
grasses. Crosses between maize and wheat, and many others, always with
the most polyploid as female, have been tried and the resulting
embryos, when such occur, have been rescued by tissue culture. The
results are maternally haploid progeny and also include cell lines that
have additional chromosomes that are eliminated during mitoses and
plant regeneration; hybrids created by protoplast fusion fared
similarly (Laurie et al., 1990
). There is one glaring, very wide cross
success that was between grasses that are maximally diverged: pollen
from maize (Panicoid; ancient tetraploid) onto eggs of oats (Pooid;
recent hexaploid). A recent publication (Riera-Lizarazu et al., 2000
)
refers to success at adding each chromosome from maize into oat and
having this chromosome predictably transmit to the next generation.
This paper highlights one of these monosomic lines containing maize
chromosome 9 as a source for construction of radiation hybrid mapping
populations. Oat seeds with one chromosome 9 were irradiated. The often
deleted or minimized chromosome 9 was recovered in oats, identified
because these oats contained maize specific mid-repetitive sequences, and then mapped using 39 maize markers spaced along the 151 map units,
and 191 Mb, of chromosome 9. Results indicate that 100 informative
radiation hybrid lines should permit mapping to 0.5 to 1.0 Mb, which
should be very approximately 10 to 20 genes as extrapolated from data
(Bennetzen, 2000
) on the maize adh1 region. Even higher
resolution is possible with more lines. Using maize-specific probes to
examine addition line karyotypes by fluorescent in situ hybridization
shows exactly where these fragments of maize DNA end up in oat
chromosomes, providing an unparalleled tool for examining aspects of
chromatin-level gene regulation. As referenced by Riera-Lizarazu et al.
(2000
, citing Muehlbauer et al., 2000), there is at least one case
where a gene on the added maize chromosome expresses and alters phenotype.
By applying "grass as a single genetic system," it seems possible that mapping in outlying grasses might be to PCR-generated gene fragments, and then these gene fragments might be mapped in maize using radiation hybrids. Gene mapping in any grass should identify the candidate genes in the rice sequence.
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THE CONSEQUENCES OF ROUNDS AND ROUNDS OF DUPLICATIONS AND BREAKPOINTS: THE IMPORTANCE OF CONSOLIDATION OF CHROMOSOMES BEFORE COLINEARITY COMPARISONS |
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Internal sequence comparisons of yeast have discovered much
duplication and a tetraploid ancestry is suspected (Wolfe and Shields,
1997
). Arabidopsis is largely duplicated as well and a comparison of
tomato and Arabidopsis, two widely diverged dicots, leads to the
general conclusion that Arabidopsis has undergone an ancient
tetraploidization event and subsequent large-scale duplication events
as well (Blanc et al., 2000
; Ku et al., 2000
). Duplications of the
genome, in whole and in part, may be the rule rather than the exception.
Maize is thought to be descended from a segmental allotetraploidy event
(Gaut and Doebley, 1997
) that happened approximately 20 million years
ago (for discussion, see Bennetzen, 2000
). The case of allotetraploid
maize illustrates an important point I call "consolidation." There
are numerous cases of duplicate genes that map to the suspected
homeologs, but there also numerous cases of sequences that seem to
hybridize as single genes and there are certainly many, many recessive
mutant alleles identified in maize. Thus, it is difficult to know what
to expect of a once-duplicated genome after 20 million years of
evolution. One study (Sentoku et al., 1999
and refs. therein) generated
data on which some useful predictions can be made. After exhaustive
hybridization searches, there turns out to be seven class I homeobox
genes (knox genes) in rice, a presumed true
diploid, and nine in maize, not 14 as would be initially expected on
the basis of polyploidy. Only one of the extra genes in maize maps to
the syntenic region and is diverged to the extent expected of the
genomic duplicate; the other extra knox gene is an obviously
recent, linked duplication. This computes to 14% (1/7) retained
tetraploidy, 14% recent duplication, 86% winnowing, where
one of the once-duplicated genes has been deleted, and 100% synteny,
where every rice gene maps to a macrocolinear position in maize. Figure
3 is a totally hypothetical model where an ancestral stretch of chromosome marked in blocks 1 through 10 is
duplicated and in the process, partially duplicated again and inserted
within itself in inverted order. One possible evolved consequence of
this duplication-triplication inversion event is shown, using the large
winnowing frequency found by Sentoku and coworkers. The point of this
exercise is to emphasize that duplications establish macrocolinear
arrangements that are expected to alter over time. (Ku and coworkers
[2000], working with dicots, used the term "network of synteny"
when describing the consequences of evolution from duplicated genomes;
their discussions are conceptually similar to my own.) It is premature
to call deviations from colinearity within single chromosomes
"exceptions" until all of the duplicated regions are sequenced and
consolidated into one virtual chromosome. The inset of Figure 3 shows a
comparison of the original ancestral sequence with the consolidated
sequence; the result is 100% synteny and some added
complexity.
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THE MECHANICAL BASIS FOR DARWINIAN EVOLUTION |
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Using "grasses as a single genetic system," there is a logical
avenue to discover the sorts of genes that when mutant, generate macromutations important for speciation and adaptation. The mechanical basis for Darwinian evolution is, of course, grail-like in importance (Goldschmidt, 1952
) and cannot be addressed in any single species genetic system.
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CONCLUSIONS |
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Most data support and none refute the general conclusion that
grasses share "alleles" of the ancestral grass genome rearranged in
blocks that remain long enough to reconstruct, by the process of
consolidation, useful syntenic relationships. The vast paradigm called
"grasses as a single genetic system," (Bennetzen and Freeling, 1993
) has now been redefined in these few paragraphs. This paradigm provides a way to extract from natural variation those gene sequences, alleles, that caused profound evolutionary changes, and not to be
sidetracked by all of those alleles "along for the ride." In studying these sequences, the mechanisms by which they are expressed, and the biological context within which they acquire meaning, it is
possible that we may yet be able to reduce profound diversity
the sort
of diversity represented by the morphological differences in Figure
1
to principles of design.
There are many components necessary to proceed within "grasses as a single genetic system." Progress could be impeded by inadequate talent, funding, or political will. Thinking by commodity is certainly not helpful. Excessive self-interest among institutions, for-profits, and governments, or barriers to export of germplasm could also slow progress. There is one component that is fundamental and irreversibly limiting: the availability of wild germplasm. It would be ironic to say the least if our most specialized and vulnerable wild species become extinct before we are able to understand and value their alleles.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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I would like to thank the members of the Freeling Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley for their useful discussions.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Received November 7, 2000; accepted December 6, 2000.
* E-mail freeling{at}nature.berkeley.edu; fax 510-642-4995.
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Y. Kimura, Y. Tosa, S. Shimada, R. Sogo, M. Kusaba, T. Sunaga, S. Betsuyaku, Y. Eto, H. Nakayashiki, and S. Mayama OARE-1, a Ty1-copia Retrotransposon in Oat Activated by Abiotic and Biotic Stresses Plant Cell Physiol., December 1, 2001; 42(12): 1345 - 1354. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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