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Koval, David P.
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Botany and Plant Pathology
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- Creator:
- Graebner, Ryan C., Wise, Mitchell, Cuesta-Marcos, Alfonso, Geniza, Matthew, Blake, Tom, Blake, Victoria C., Butler, Joshua, Chao, Shiaoman, Hole, David J., Horsley, Rich, Jaiswal, Pankaj, Obert, Don, Smith, Kevin P., Ullrich, Steven, and Hayes, Patrick M.
- Abstract:
- The Genome-Wide Association Studies approach was used to detect Quantitative Trait Loci associated with tocochromanol concentrations using a panel of 1,466 barley accessions. All major tocochromanol types- α-, β-, δ-, γ-tocopherol and tocotrienol- were assayed. We found 13 single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with the concentration of one or more of...
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- . C., ... & Hayes, P. M. (2015). Quantitative trait loci associated with the tocochromanol (vitamin E
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- Creator:
- Manning, Viola A., Pandelova, Iovanna, Dhillon, Braham, Wilhelm, Larry J., Goodwin, Stephen B., Berlin, Aaron M., Figueroa, Melania, Freitag, Michael, Hane, James K., Henrissat, Bernard, Holman, Wade H., Kodira, Chinnappa D., Martin, Joel, Oliver, Richard P., Robbertse, Barbara, Schackwitz, Wendy, Schwartz, David C., Spatafora, Joseph W., Turgeon, B. Gillian, Yandava, Chandri, Young, Sarah, Zhou, Shiguo, Zeng, Qiandong, Grigoriev, Igor V., Ma, Li-Jun, and Ciuffetti, Lynda M.
- Abstract:
- Pyrenophora tritici-repentis is a necrotrophic fungus causal to the disease tan spot of wheat, whose contribution to crop loss has increased significantly during the last few decades. Pathogenicity by this fungus is attributed to the production of host-selective toxins ( HST), which are recognized by their host in a genotype-specific...
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- ,§§§ Richard P. Oliver,**** Barbara Robbertse,†††† Wendy Schackwitz,§§§ David C. Schwartz,‡‡‡‡ Joseph W
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- Creator:
- Floudas, Dimitrios, Yadav, Jagjit S., Aerts, Andrea, Benoit, Isabelle, Boyd, Alex, Carlson, Alexis, Copeland, Alex, Coutinho, Pedro M., de Vries, Ronald P., Ferreira, Patricia, Findley, Keisha, Binder, Manfred, Foster, Brian, Gaskell, Jill, Glotzer, Dylan, Gorecki, Pawel, Heitman, Joseph, Hesse, Cedar, Hori, Chiaki, Igarashi, Kiyohiko, Jurgens, Joel A., Kallen, Nathan, Riley, Robert, Kersten, Phil, Kohler, Annegret, Kues, Ursula, Kumar, T. K. Arun, Kuo, Alan, LaButti, Kurt, Larrondo, Luis F., Lindquist, Erika, Ling, Albee, Lombard, Vincent, Barry, Kerrie, Lucas, Susan, Lundell, Taina, Martin, Rachael, McLaughlin, David J., Morgenstern, Ingo, Morin, Emanuelle, Murat, Claude, Nagy, Laszlo G., Nolan, Matt, Ohm, Robin A., Blanchette, Robert A., Patyshakuliyeva, Aleksandrina, Rokas, Antonis, Ruiz-Duenas, Francisco J., Sabat, Grzegorz, Salamov, Asaf, Samejima, Masahiro, Schmutz, Jeremy, Slot, Jason C., St. John, Franz, Stenlid, Jan, Henrissat, Bernard, Sun, Hui, Sun, Sheng, Syed, Khajamohiddin, Tsang, Adrian, Wiebenga, Ad, Young, Darcy, Pisabarro, Antonio, Eastwood, Daniel C., Martin, Francis, Cullen, Dan, Martínez, Angel T., Grigoriev, Igor V., Hibbett, David S., Otillar, Robert, and Spatafora, Joseph W.
- Abstract:
- Wood is a major pool of organic carbon that is highly resistant to decay, owing largely to the presence of lignin. The only organisms capable of substantial lignin decay are white rot fungi in the Agaricomycetes, which also contains non–lignin-degrading brown rot and ectomycorrhizal species. Comparative analyses of 31 fungal...
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- Article
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- Creator:
- Deans, Andrew R., Lewis, Suzanna E., Huala, Eva, Anzaldo, Salvatore S., Ashburner, Michael, Balhoff, James P., Blackburn, David C., Blake, Judith A., Burleigh, J. Gordon, Chanet, Bruno, Cooper, Lauren D., Courtot, Mélanie, Csösz, Sándor, Cul, Hong, Dahdul, Wasila, Das, Sandip, Dececchi, T. Alexander, Dettal, Agnes, Diogo, Rui, Druzinsky, Robert E., Dumontier, Michel, Franz, Nico M., Friedrich, Frank, Gkoutos, George V., Haendel, Melissa, Harmon, Luke J., Hayamizu, Terry F., He, Yongqun, Hines, Heather M., Ibrahim, Nizar, Jackson, Laura M., Jaiswal, Pankaj, James-Zorn, Christina, Köhler, Sebastian, Lecointre, Guillaume, Lapp, Hilmar, Lawrence, Carolyn J., Le Novère, Nicolas, Lundberg, John G., Macklin, James, Mast, Austin R., Midford, Peter E., Mikó, István, Mungall, Christopher J., Oellrich, Anika, Osumi-Sutherland, David, Parkinson, Helen, Ramírez, Martín J., Richter, Stefan, Robinson, Peter N., Ruttenberg, Alan, Schulz, Katja S., Segerdell, Erik, Seltmann, Katja C., Sharkey, Michael J., Smith, Aaron D., Smith, Barry, Specht, Chelsea D., Squires, R. Burke, Thacker, Robert W., Thessen, Anne, Fernandez-Triana, Jose, Vihinen, Mauno, Vize, Peter D., Vogt, Lars, Wall, Christine E., Walls, Ramona L., Westerfeld, Monte, Wharton, Robert A., Wirkner, Christian S., Woolley, James B., Yoder, Matthew J., Zorn, Aaron M., and Mabee, Paula
- Abstract:
- Despite a large and multifaceted effort to understand the vast landscape of phenotypic data, their current form inhibits productive data analysis. The lack of a community-wide, consensus-based, human- and machine-interpretable language for describing phenotypes and their genomic and environmental contexts is perhaps the most pressing scientific bottleneck to integration across...
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- . Lewis2, Eva Huala3,4, Salvatore S. Anzaldo5, Michael Ashburner6, James P. Balhoff7, David C. Blackburn8
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- Creator:
- Gene Ontology Consortium, Berardini, Tanya Z., Li, Donghui, Huala, Eva, Bridges, Susan, Burgess, Shane, McCarthy, Fiona, Carbon, Seth, Lewis, Suzanna E., Mungall, Christopher J., Abdulla, Amina, Wood, Valerie, Feltrin, Erika, Valle, Giorgio, Chisholm, Rex L., Fey, Petra, Gaudet, Pascale, Kibbe, Warren, Basu, Siddhartha, Bushmanova, Yulia, Eilbeck, Karen, Siegele, Deborah A., McIntosh, Brenley, Renfro, Daniel, Zweifel, Adrienne, Hu, James C., Harris, Midori A., Deegan, Jennifer I., Ireland, Amelia, Lomax, Jane, Jaiswal, Pankaj, Chibucos, Marcus, Gwinn-Giglio, Michelle, Wortman, Jennifer, Hannick, Linda, Madupu, Ramana, Botstein, David, Dolinski, Kara, Livstone, Michael S., Oughtred, Rose, Blake, Judith A., Bult, Carol, Diehl, Alexander D., Dolan, Mary, Drabkin, Harold, Eppig, Janan T., Hill, David P., Ni, Li, Ringwald, Martin, Sitnikov, Dmitry, Collmer, Candace, Torto-Alalibo, Trudy, Laulederkind, Stan, Shimoyama, Mary, Twigger, Simon, D'Eustachio, Peter, Matthews, Lisa, Balakrishnan, Rama, Binkley, Gail, Cherry, J. Michael, Christie, Karen R., Costanzo, Maria C., Engel, Stacia R., Fisk, Dianna G., Hirschman, Jodi E., Hitz, Benjamin C., Hong, Eurie L., Krieger, Cynthia J., Miyasato, Stuart R., Nash, Robert S., Park, Julie, Skrzypek, Marek S., Weng, Shuai, Wong, Edith D., Aslett, Martin, Chan, Juancarlos, Kishore, Ranjana, Sternberg, Paul, Van Auken, Kimberly, Khodiyar, Varsha K., Lovering, Ruth C., and Talmud, Philippa J.
- Abstract:
- The Gene Ontology (GO) Consortium (http://www.geneontology.org) (GOC) continues to develop, maintain and use a set of structured, controlled vocabularies for the annotation of genes, gene products and sequences. The GO ontologies are expanding both in content and in structure. Several new relationship types have been introduced and used, along with...
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- . Diehl, Mary Dolan, Harold Drabkin, Janan T. Eppig, David P. Hill, Li Ni, Martin Ringwald, Dmitry