Fuente: UGA.Today: Research  News
  Expuesto el: lunes, 18 de junio de 2012 19:09
  Autor: jbeckley@uga.edu
  Asunto: Tomato sequencing project sheds light on the plant’s origins
| Athens, Ga. - Researchers    in the University of Georgia Plant Genome Mapping Laboratory recently helped finish    the decade-long process of sequencing the tomato genome. The genome mapping effort    involved more than 300 researchers working at universities and research    institutes in more than a dozen countries. A team from UGA worked under the    guidance of Andrew Paterson, a Regents Professor of Plant Breeding and    Genetics, and spent the past two years looking into the evolutionary history    of the tomato's genome—trying to find the place where the tomato split from    its flowering plant forbearers. Dubbed the Tomato Genome    Consortium, the researchers involved in the project published their findings    in the May 31 edition of Nature. "This project    combined fundamental insight into flowering plant evolution, in particular    the first case known of a lineage that experienced consecutive genome    triplications, with application-oriented work such as the discovery of many    genes likely to contribute to breeding better tomatoes," Paterson said. Graduate students    Jingping Li, Hui Guo, Yupeng Wang, Dong Zhang, former graduate student Haibao    Tang, postdoctoral researcher Tae-ho Lee and assistant research scientist    Xiyin Wang discovered numerous insights into tomato evolution, in particular    that the entire set of genes within the tomato's ancestors had been repeated    three times. Paterson's team, who    represent both the UGA College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences and    Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, has played a pioneering role in a    period of discovery of duplications and triplications of gene sets in the    genomes of many of the world's leading crops and botanical models. Repetition    of the gene set has been important in the worldwide spread of flowering    plants and in the evolution of crops, providing ‘spare genes' that can evolve    new traits while the plant also retains the traits prescribed by its original    set of genes. The tomato and its    relatives, which include the potato, have gone through this process not once    but twice, Paterson's team found. It's the first known case of two    consecutive triplications of an original set of genes. Identifying the changed    genes in each of these triplicated gene sets will help researchers pinpoint    which genes control the characteristics that make a tomato a tomato—things    like fruit size, flavor and texture. Paterson, who was    recently recognized for his work sequencing sorghum and cotton, had studied    tomatoes during his post-doctoral work. His team joined the Tomato Genome    Consortium in 2009. Researchers on the tomato    genome project focused on fully understanding the sequence of one tomato variety,    Heinz 1706. This sequence can now be used to more fully decipher the genetic    makeup of other tomato varieties and eventually be used to breed better    tomatoes. As a part of the effort,    researchers compared the Heinz 1706 genome to the genome of one of the    tomato's wild ancestors and to the potato genome. They found only a 0.6    percent divergence between the genetic information contained in the wild and    modern tomato varieties but found about an 8 percent divergence between the    potato and tomato, according to the article published in Nature. Those points where the    genetic information diverges, Paterson said, are clues to changes that may    explain why one plant makes potatoes and another tomatoes. For more information on    the study, see http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v485/n7400/full/nature11119.html. 
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