Faculty Opinions recommendation of Transcriptome analysis and physical mapping of barley genes in wheat-barley chromosome addition lines.

Author(s):  
Pat Heslop-Harrison
Heredity ◽  
1984 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 425-429 ◽  
Author(s):  
J L Santos ◽  
J R Lacadena ◽  
M C Cermeño ◽  
J Orellana

1981 ◽  
Vol 37 (2) ◽  
pp. 215-219 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. K. M. R. Islam ◽  
K. W. Shepherd

SUMMARYThe possibility of using Hordeum bulbosum Crosses to facilitate production of disomic wheat–barley addition lines from monosomic additions was investigated. Aneuhaploids with 22 chromosomes were obtained in the expected gametic frequencies after crossing monosomic, disomio and monotelo-disomic addition lines, involving four different barley chromosomes, as the female parent with tetraploid H. bulbosum. Thus the added barley chromosomes were not eliminated when preferential elimination of the bulbosum chromosomes took place in the hybrid embryos. Disomic addition lines were obtained after treating the aneuhaploids with colchicine. This method could have wider application in the production of other wheat–alien chromosome disomic addition lines, especially where the transmission frequency of the alien chromosome through the pollen is very low, but its use will depend on the wheat parent being crossarle with H. bulbosum and the alien chromosome being retained during the elimination of bulbosum chromosomes.


Genome ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 50 (10) ◽  
pp. 898-906 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hatice Bilgic ◽  
Seungho Cho ◽  
David F. Garvin ◽  
Gary J. Muehlbauer

Wheat–barley disomic and ditelosomic chromosome addition lines have been used as genetic tools for a range of applications since their development in the 1980s. In the present study, we used the Affymetrix Barley1 GeneChip for comparative transcript analysis of the barley cultivar Betzes, the wheat cultivar Chinese Spring, and Chinese Spring – Betzes ditelosomic chromosome addition lines to physically map barley genes to their respective chromosome arm locations. We mapped 1257 barley genes to chromosome arms 1HS, 2HS, 2HL, 3HS, 3HL, 4HS, 4HL, 5HS, 5HL, 7HS, and 7HL based on their transcript levels in the ditelosomic addition lines. The number of genes assigned to individual chromosome arms ranged from 24 to 197. We validated the physical locations of the genes through comparison with our previous chromosome-based physical mapping, comparative in silico mapping with rice and wheat, and single feature polymorphism (SFP) analysis. We found our physical mapping of barley genes to chromosome arms to be consistent with our previous physical mapping to whole chromosomes. In silico comparative mapping of barley genes assigned to chromosome arms revealed that the average genomic synteny to wheat and rice chromosome arms was 63.2% and 65.5%, respectively. In the 1257 mapped genes, we identified SFPs in 924 genes between the appropriate ditelosomic line and Chinese Spring that supported physical map placements. We also identified a single small rearrangement event between rice chromosome 9 and barley chromosome 4H that accounts for the loss of synteny for several genes.


2011 ◽  
Vol 157 (3) ◽  
pp. 1555-1567 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianwei Tang ◽  
Kiyoshi Ohyama ◽  
Kanako Kawaura ◽  
Hiromi Hashinokuchi ◽  
Yoko Kamiya ◽  
...  

Genetics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 156 (1) ◽  
pp. 327-339 ◽  
Author(s):  
O Riera-Lizarazu ◽  
M I Vales ◽  
E V Ananiev ◽  
H W Rines ◽  
R L Phillips

Abstract In maize (Zea mays L., 2n = 2x = 20), map-based cloning and genome organization studies are often complicated because of the complexity of the genome. Maize chromosome addition lines of hexaploid cultivated oat (Avena sativa L., 2n = 6x = 42), where maize chromosomes can be individually manipulated, represent unique materials for maize genome analysis. Maize chromosome addition lines are particularly suitable for the dissection of a single maize chromosome using radiation because cultivated oat is an allohexaploid in which multiple copies of the oat basic genome provide buffering to chromosomal aberrations and other mutations. Irradiation (gamma rays at 30, 40, and 50 krad) of a monosomic maize chromosome 9 addition line produced maize chromosome 9 radiation hybrids (M9RHs)—oat lines possessing different fragments of maize chromosome 9 including intergenomic translocations and modified maize addition chromosomes with internal and terminal deletions. M9RHs with 1 to 10 radiation-induced breaks per chromosome were identified. We estimated that a panel of 100 informative M9RHs (with an average of 3 breaks per chromosome) would allow mapping at the 0.5- to 1.0-Mb level of resolution. Because mapping with maize chromosome addition lines and radiation hybrid derivatives involves assays for the presence or absence of a given marker, monomorphic markers can be quickly and efficiently mapped to a chromosome region. Radiation hybrid derivatives also represent sources of region-specific DNA for cloning of genes or DNA markers.


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