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Plant genome archaeology: evidence for conserved ancestral chromosome segments in dicotyledonous plant species
Authors:Dominguez Isabelle  Graziano Enrique  Gebhardt Christiane  Barakat Abdelali  Berry Simon  Arús Pere  Delseny Michel  Barnes Stephen
Affiliation:ADVANTA, SES-Europe NV, Industriepark, Soldatenplein Z2 nr 15, B-3300 Tienen, Belgium;IRTA, Departament de Genètica Vegetal, Carretera de Cabrils s/n 08348 Cabrils (Barcelona), Spain;Max-Plack Institute for Breeding Research, Carl von Linne Weg 10, D-50829 Köln, Germany;Génome et Developpement des Plantes, UMR 5096 CNRS, Universitéde Perpignan, 66860 Perpignan Cédex, France
Abstract:We have developed genetic maps, based on expressed sequence tags (ESTs) that are homologous to Arabidopsis genes, in four dicotyledonous crop plant species from different families. A comparison of these maps with the physical map of Arabidopsis reveals common genome segments that appear to have been conserved throughout the evolution of the dicots. In the four crop species analysed these segments comprise between 16 and 33% of the Arabidopsis genome. Our findings extend the synteny patterns previously observed only within plant families, and indicate that structural and functional information from the model species will be, at least in part, applicable in crop plants with large genomes.
Keywords:Arabidopsis thaliana    Solanum tuberosum    Helianthus annuus    Beta vulgaris    Prunus    synteny
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