Assessing Genomic Evolution of Tubulin Gene Family for Camelina Species Genotyping - Cytology and Genetics

Abstract Tubulin plays a key role in the functioning of cytoskeletal systems that regulate such fundamental processes as cell division and growth. Correct identification of isotypes and determination of the orthology of tubulin genes in plants is a nontrivial task that requires the involvement of a complex of bioinformatics approaches. In the present study, a genome-wide search and identification of tubulin genes was carried out in diploid representatives of the genus Camelina, in particular in the C. neglecta, C. laxa, and C. hispida species, which allowed the authors to identify complete sets of α-, β-, and γ-tubulin genes as well as their pseudogenes. Phylogenetic analysis and a series of genome-wide comparisons allowed for establishing the orthology of the tubulin genes, determining isotype identity of the encoded tubulins, and tracing evolutionary changes in tubulin gene sets during species divergence and the emergence of allohexaploid C. sativa species. Genotyping of the accessions of different Camelina species using TBP-, cTBP-, and γTBP-markers allowed effective differentiation of species based on the assessment of polymorphisms of intronic regions of the β- and γ-tubulin genes. The obtained results lay a strong groundwork for further studies of the isotype and functional diversity of tubulins in Cruciferae and other groups of flowering plants and will also contribute to the development and implementation of new, highly efficient molecular marker systems for DNA-barcoding and marker-assisted breeding of plant species, including such promising oilseed crops as C. sativa.

SpringerLink

🧬🌿 axiomFP.py a software for visual ploidy and quality assessment of Axiom SNP array data

https://doi.org/10.1093/insilicoplants/diaf015 #genotyping #PlantScience

Introducing an open-source software developed to diagnose ploidy level and call quality for samples genotyped on Affymetrix Axiom SNP arrays

https://doi.org/10.1093/insilicoplants/diaf015 #genotyping #PlantScience

Paper of the week - week 38:

Schneider et al. 2024:

Deep genotyping reveals specific adaptation footprints
of conventional and organic farming in barley populations—an
evolutionary plant breeding approach

https://link.springer.com/content/pdf/10.1007/s13593-024-00962-8.pdf

#benediktspapersoftheweek #barley #organicfarming #conventionalfarming #evolution #genotyping

T-DNA insertions: more surprises than you think 🌱🧬.
PCR can miss extra T-DNAs & complex rearrangements. Long-read sequencing captures the full picture. Still super relevant for plant genomics!
🔗 https://doi.org/10.1186/s12864-021-07877-8
#PlantScience #Genotyping #LongReadSequencing #Arabidopsis @PuckerLab
#23andMe Sale Shows Your #Genetic Data Is Worth $17
23andMe sold genetic data of 15M people for $256M to a #pharmaceutical #Regeneron. 23andMe does not perform full genome sequences. It instead does #DNA #genotyping, which look at parts of #genome that vary from person to person.
Sale to Regeneron means #gene data collected by 23andMe will be used for development of new #drugs, which felt like the most likely and perhaps best-case scenario for the company’s bankruptcy.
https://www.404media.co/23andme-sale-shows-your-genetic-data-is-worth-17/
23andMe Sale Shows Your Genetic Data Is Worth $17

23andMe sold the genetic data of 15 million people for $256 million to a pharmaceutical company called Regeneron.

404 Media

Mammoths Lived During Pyramids! - Ben Lamm on JRE

#mammoth #asianelephants #genotyping #fyp #explore #discover

A California man’s conviction despite DNA evidence pointing to his innocence has reignited debate over forensic algorithms.

Critics question the transparency and reliability of tools used in probabilistic genotyping like TrueAllele.

https://undark.org/2024/12/16/unleashed-data-dragnet/

#criminaljustice #science #DNAsequencing #crime #Algorithms #undark #unitedstates #USPolitics #usa #us #biology #genotyping #dna #california

The Data Dragnet: A New World of Technological Surveillance

Advances in DNA technology and artificial intelligence may usher in a more Orwellian world. But do they work?

Undark Magazine