18 results on '"Madan Thangavelu"'
Search Results
2. Sustainably healthy, active & veggy. Prevalence of vegetarians and vegans in Austrian pupils, teachers of secondary level
- Author
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Katharina Wirnitzer and Madan Thangavelu
- Subjects
Complementary and alternative medicine - Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Contribution of Complementary and Alternative Medicine to Reduce Antibiotic Use: A Narrative Review of Health Concepts, Prevention, and Treatment Strategies
- Author
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Madan Thangavelu, Merlin Willcox, Thomas Breitkreuz, Josef Hummelsberger, Esther T van der Werf, Ursula Wolf, Henrik Szőke, Philippe Hartemann, Michael Teut, Georg Soldner, Tido von Schoen-Angerer, Herman A van Wietmarschen, Ton Nicolai, David D. Martin, Michael McIntyre, Roman Huber, Klaus von Ammon, Eefje Belt-van Zoen, Jan Vagedes, Harald Matthes, Olga Patijn, Paschen von Flotow, and Erik W. Baars
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Alternative medicine ,MEDLINE ,610 Medicine & health ,Review Article ,antibiotics ,alternative therapy ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Promotion (rank) ,medicine ,Infection control ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,media_common ,Selection bias ,Conceptualization ,business.industry ,lcsh:Other systems of medicine ,lcsh:RZ201-999 ,ddc ,3. Good health ,Health promotion ,Systematic review ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Aim. The aim of this narrative review was to explore the potential contributions of CAM to reduce antibiotic use. Methods. We searched PubMed, Embase, and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews with a specific, limited set of search terms and collected input from a group of expert CAM researchers to answer the question: What is known about the contribution of CAM health and health promotion concepts, infection prevention, and infection treatment strategies to reduce antibiotic use? Results. The worldview-related CAM health concepts enable health promotion oriented infection prevention and treatment aimed at strengthening or supporting the self-regulating ability of the human organism to cope with diseases. There is some evidence that the CAM concepts of health (promotion) are in agreement with current conceptualization of health and that doctors who practice both CAM and conventional medicine prescribe less antibiotics, although selection bias of the presented studies cannot be ruled out. There is some evidence that prevention and some treatment strategies are effective and safe. Many CAM treatment strategies are promising but overall lack high quality evidence. Conclusions. CAM prevention and treatment strategies may contribute to reducing antibiotic use, but more rigorous research is necessary to provide high quality evidence of (cost-)effectiveness.
- Published
- 2019
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- View/download PDF
4. Interrogation of genomes by molecular copy-number counting (MCC)
- Author
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Grace Tin-Yun Chung, Terence H. Rabbitts, Richard Pannell, Angelika Daser, Madan Thangavelu, Louise Sparrow, Paul H. Dear, and Alan Forster
- Subjects
Cloning ,Genetics ,Base pair ,Breakpoint ,Chromosomal translocation ,Cell Biology ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,genomic DNA ,chemistry ,Genomic library ,Molecular Biology ,DNA ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Human cancers and some congenital traits are characterized by cytogenetic aberrations including translocations, amplifications, duplications or deletions that can involve gain or loss of genetic material. We have developed a simple method to precisely delineate such regions with known or cryptic genomic alterations. Molecular copy-number counting (MCC) uses PCR to interrogate miniscule amounts of genomic DNA and allows progressive delineation of DNA content to within a few hundred base pairs of a genomic alteration. As an example, we have located the junctions of a recurrent nonreciprocal translocation between chromosomes 3 and 5 in human renal cell carcinoma, facilitating cloning of the breakpoint without recourse to genomic libraries. The analysis also revealed additional cryptic chromosomal changes close to the translocation junction. MCC is a fast and flexible method for characterizing a wide range of chromosomal aberrations. *Note: Correspondence should be addressed to M. Thangavelu (mt370@hutchison-mrc.cam.ac.uk) instead of T. H. Rabbitts. The error has been corrected in the PDF version of the article.
- Published
- 2006
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5. Characterization of a gene from chromosome 1B encoding the large subunit of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase from wheat: evolutionary divergence and differential expression of Agp2 genes between leaves and developing endosperm
- Author
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Michael M. Burrell, David Thorneycroft, Joanna M. Clark, Igor Vizir, Felicia Hosein, Charles Ainsworth, and Madan Thangavelu
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Genetics ,Reporter gene ,cDNA library ,fungi ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Molecular biology ,Endosperm ,Aleurone ,Complementary DNA ,Gene expression ,Genomic library ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Gene ,Biotechnology - Abstract
A full-length genomic clone containing the gene encoding the large subunit of the ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (Agp2), was isolated from a genomic library prepared from etiolated shoots of hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum L., cv, Chinese Spring). The coding region of this gene is identical to one of the cDNA clones previously isolated from a developing wheat grain cDNA library and is therefore an actively transcribed gene. The sequence represented by the cDNA spans 4.8 kb of the genomic clone and contains 15 introns. 2852 bp of DNA flanking the transcription start site of the gene was cloned upstream of the GUS (beta-glucuronidase) reporter gene. This Agp2::GUS construct and promoter deletions were used to study the pattern of reporter gene expression in both transgenic tobacco and wheat plants. Histochemical analysis of GUS expression in transgenic tobacco demonstrated that the reporter gene was expressed in guard cells of leaves and throughout the seed. In transgenic wheat, reporter gene expression was confined to the endosperm and aleurone with no expression in leaves. The cloned Agp2 gene was located to chromosome 1B by gene-specific PCR with nullisomic-tetrasomic lines. Northern analysis demonstrated that the Agp2 genes are differentially expressed in leaves and developing endosperm; while all three classes of Agp2 genes are transcribed in developing wheat grain endosperm, only one is transcribed in leaves. The differences between the Agp2 genes are discussed in relation to the evolution of hexaploid wheat.
- Published
- 2003
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- View/download PDF
6. HAPPY mapping in a plant genome: reconstruction and analysis of a high-resolution physical map of a 1.9 Mbp region ofArabidopsis thalianachromosome 4
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Madan Thangavelu, Robbie Waugh, Alan T. Bankier, Paul H. Dear, Allan James, and Glenn J. Bryan
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Genetics ,Happy mapping ,Locus (genetics) ,Plant Science ,Computational biology ,Genome project ,Biology ,Genome ,DNA sequencing ,genomic DNA ,Chromosome 4 ,Genetic marker ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
HAPPY mapping is an in vitro approach for defining the order and spacing of DNA markers directly on native genomic DNA. This cloning-free technique is based on analysing the segregation of markers amplified from high molecular weight genomic DNA which has been broken randomly and 'segregated' by limiting dilution into subhaploid samples. It is a uniquely versatile tool, allowing for the construction of genome maps with flexible ranges and resolutions. Moreover, it is applicable to plant genomes, for which many of the techniques pioneered in animal genomes are inapplicable or inappropriate. We report here its demonstration in a plant genome by reconstructing the physical map of a 1.9 Mbp region around the FCA locus of Arabidopsis thaliana. The resulting map, spanning around 10% of chromosome 4, is in excellent agreement with the DNA sequence and has a mean marker spacing of 16 kbp. We argue that HAPPY maps of any required resolution can be made immediately and with relatively little effort for most plant species and, furthermore, that such maps can greatly aid the construction of regional or genome-wide physical maps.
- Published
- 2002
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7. Partial characterization of the Nicotiana tabacum actin gene family: Evidence for pollen-specific expression of one of the gene family members
- Author
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R. B. Flavell, David M. Lonsdale, Hilary J. Rogers, Dmitry A. Belostotsky, Michael W. Bevan, and Madan Thangavelu
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Nicotiana tabacum ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Restriction Mapping ,macromolecular substances ,Genes, Plant ,Homology (biology) ,Exon ,Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid ,Tobacco ,Gene expression ,Genetics ,Gene family ,Genomic library ,Amino Acid Sequence ,Molecular Biology ,Gene ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,biology ,food and beverages ,DNA ,Blotting, Northern ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Actins ,Blotting, Southern ,Plants, Toxic ,Open reading frame ,Organ Specificity ,Multigene Family ,Pollen - Abstract
The actin gene family of Nicotiana tabacum has been partially characterised by Southern hybridisation and by isolating lambda EMBL4 recombinants from a genomic library having homology to the soybean actin gene, Sac3. The number of actin genes with homology to Sac3 is estimated at between 20 to 30, based on Southern hybridisation and library screening, though the total gene family may be larger. Twenty-four recombinant lambda clones were isolated, 18 had unique restriction profiles and from these, 2 clones, Tac9 and Tac25, were selected for further study. The region of Tac25 hybridizing to Sac3 was sequenced and shown to contain an open reading frame (ORF) with homology to actin. Partial sequencing of Tac9 revealed a sequence with homology to the third exon of Tac25 and Sac3. The two tobacco actin sequences were compared to other reported actin gene sequences; Tac25 was closely related to the allelic potato actins, Pac58 and Pac85, while Tac9 was more related to Pac79 than to other plant actins. Northern hybridisation analysis showed that while Tac9 detected actin transcripts in RNA from root, leaf, stigma and pollen, Tac25 transcripts were only detected in pollen RNA.
- Published
- 1993
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8. Extraordinary Stability of Enzymes Dried in Trehalose: Simplified Molecular Biology
- Author
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Madan Thangavelu, Bruce Joseph Roser, Camilo Colaco, Shevanti Sen, and Stephen Pinder
- Subjects
Preservation, Biological ,Carbohydrates ,Biomedical Engineering ,Bioengineering ,Biology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Enzyme Stability ,Desiccation ,Practical implications ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Biomolecule ,Temperature ,Trehalose ,DNA Restriction Enzymes ,Bacteriophage lambda ,Molecular biology ,In vitro ,Prolonged exposure ,Enzyme ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,DNA, Viral ,Molecular Medicine ,DNA ,Biotechnology - Abstract
We show that extremely fragile biomolecules such as DNA restriction and modifying enzymes can be dried in vitro in the presence of trehalose with no loss of activity, even after prolonged storage. A remarkable and unexpected property of the dried enzyme preparations is their ability to withstand prolonged exposure to temperatures as high as +70 degrees C. This stability is unique to trehalose and is not found with other sugars irrespective of their physical or chemical properties. The immediate significance of these observations is the ability to convert enzymes used in molecular biology into stable reagents. The indefinite stability and high temperature tolerance of these dried enzymes should permit the design of convenient formats that may be of particular significance in the automation of genome mapping and sequencing projects. The stabilization of a wide range of biomolecules by trehalose also has practical implications for a number of areas ranging from basic science, through healthcare and agriculture, to bio-electronics.
- Published
- 1992
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9. On linear dimension reduction for multiclass classification of Gaussian mixtures
- Author
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Madan Thangavelu and Raviv Raich
- Subjects
business.industry ,Gaussian ,ComputingMethodologies_IMAGEPROCESSINGANDCOMPUTERVISION ,Pattern recognition ,Mixture model ,Multiclass classification ,symbols.namesake ,Statistical classification ,Transformation (function) ,symbols ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Gradient descent ,Gaussian process ,Mathematics ,Parametric statistics - Abstract
Linear dimension reduction (LDR) offers a computationally attractive approach to feature extraction. Specifically for classification, numerous methods of LDR have been proposed. Many LDR algorithms implicitly or explicitly assume the Gaussian data model to derive LDR criteria. Gaussian mixture models (GMMs) offer the accuracy and flexibility that can be achieved with non-parametric models as well as the advantage of parametric representation. In this paper, we develop an LDR method that is applicable for multiclass classification of GMMs. This method is based on a novel upper bound we derive for the classification error rate of GMMs in terms of the Chernoff distance between the Gaussian mixture components. We then present a gradient descent algorithm to minimize the bound with respect to the LDR transformation. The resulting linear transformation achieves higher classification rates than the classical methods and is competitive to the state-of-the-art LDR methods.
- Published
- 2009
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10. Multiclass linear dimension reduction via a generalized Chernoff bound
- Author
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Raviv Raich and Madan Thangavelu
- Subjects
Mahalanobis distance ,Plane (geometry) ,business.industry ,Generalization ,Pattern recognition ,Class (biology) ,Separable space ,Multiclass classification ,Reduction (complexity) ,Chernoff bound ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,Algorithm ,Mathematics - Abstract
In this paper, we consider the problem of linear dimension reduction (LDR) for multiclass classification. Often, a linear projection in which classes are separable may exist, but is hard to find. In the absence of methods that can find such plane, one may unnecessarily resort to nonlinear dimension reduction (DR). Generalization of two-class separation criteria such as Mahalanobis, Bhattacharya, or Chernoff distance are often done in an ad-hoc fashion. In this paper, we propose two algorithms for multiclass LDR that aim at minimizing upper bounds on the probability of misclassification and are based on generalizations of Chernoff distance for the multiclass problem. We present a numerical study and comparison to state-of-the-art LDR methods on datasets from the UCI machine learning repository. We show that our algorithms result in lower classification error rates compared to techniques of the same class.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Characterization of a gene from chromosome 1B encoding the large subunit of ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase from wheat: evolutionary divergence and differential expression of Agp2 genes between leaves and developing endosperm
- Author
-
David, Thorneycroft, Felicia, Hosein, Madan, Thangavelu, Joanna, Clark, Igor, Vizir, Michael M, Burrell, and Charles, Ainsworth
- Abstract
A full-length genomic clone containing the gene encoding the large subunit of the ADPglucose pyrophosphorylase (Agp2), was isolated from a genomic library prepared from etiolated shoots of hexaploid wheat (Triticum aestivum L., cv, Chinese Spring). The coding region of this gene is identical to one of the cDNA clones previously isolated from a developing wheat grain cDNA library and is therefore an actively transcribed gene. The sequence represented by the cDNA spans 4.8 kb of the genomic clone and contains 15 introns. 2852 bp of DNA flanking the transcription start site of the gene was cloned upstream of the GUS (beta-glucuronidase) reporter gene. This Agp2::GUS construct and promoter deletions were used to study the pattern of reporter gene expression in both transgenic tobacco and wheat plants. Histochemical analysis of GUS expression in transgenic tobacco demonstrated that the reporter gene was expressed in guard cells of leaves and throughout the seed. In transgenic wheat, reporter gene expression was confined to the endosperm and aleurone with no expression in leaves. The cloned Agp2 gene was located to chromosome 1B by gene-specific PCR with nullisomic-tetrasomic lines. Northern analysis demonstrated that the Agp2 genes are differentially expressed in leaves and developing endosperm; while all three classes of Agp2 genes are transcribed in developing wheat grain endosperm, only one is transcribed in leaves. The differences between the Agp2 genes are discussed in relation to the evolution of hexaploid wheat.
- Published
- 2006
12. HAPPY mapping in a plant genome: reconstruction and analysis of a high-resolution physical map of a 1.9 Mbp region of Arabidopsis thaliana chromosome 4
- Author
-
Madan, Thangavelu, Allan B, James, Alan, Bankier, Glenn J, Bryan, Paul H, Dear, and Robbie, Waugh
- Abstract
HAPPY mapping is an in vitro approach for defining the order and spacing of DNA markers directly on native genomic DNA. This cloning-free technique is based on analysing the segregation of markers amplified from high molecular weight genomic DNA which has been broken randomly and 'segregated' by limiting dilution into subhaploid samples. It is a uniquely versatile tool, allowing for the construction of genome maps with flexible ranges and resolutions. Moreover, it is applicable to plant genomes, for which many of the techniques pioneered in animal genomes are inapplicable or inappropriate. We report here its demonstration in a plant genome by reconstructing the physical map of a 1.9 Mbp region around the FCA locus of Arabidopsis thaliana. The resulting map, spanning around 10% of chromosome 4, is in excellent agreement with the DNA sequence and has a mean marker spacing of 16 kbp. We argue that HAPPY maps of any required resolution can be made immediately and with relatively little effort for most plant species and, furthermore, that such maps can greatly aid the construction of regional or genome-wide physical maps.
- Published
- 2006
13. Deletion of the SNP1 trypsin protease from Stagonospora nodorum reveals another major protease expressed during infection
- Author
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Laurence V. Bindschedler, Richard M. Cooper, Madan Thangavelu, Jose Mikan, Pedro Sanchez, Steven Dunn, and John M. Clarkson
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Hyphal growth ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Mutant ,Virulence ,Gene Expression ,In Vitro Techniques ,Microbiology ,Transformation, Genetic ,Ascomycota ,Endopeptidases ,Genetics ,medicine ,Triticum ,Plant Diseases ,Protease ,biology ,Serine Endopeptidases ,Subtilisin ,biology.organism_classification ,Trypsin ,Blotting, Northern ,Enzyme assay ,Blotting, Southern ,Stagonospora ,biology.protein ,Gene Deletion ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The wheat fungal pathogen Stagonospora nodorum produces an extracellular trypsin-like protease, SNP1, during early stages of hyphal growth on the surface of host leaves and during penetration. Variation of SNP1 mRNA levels and enzyme activity during infection, were correlated with levels of aggressiveness of three wild-type isolates. SNP1 was deleted in two wild-type isolates using a gene replacement strategy. SNP1-deleted mutants completely lacked trypsin activity in vitro and on inoculated wheat leaves, but were not reduced in pathogenicity. SNP1-deleted mutants still have 50% of the total alkaline protease activity of wild-type. This residual activity comes from a previously undetected alkaline protease with subtilisin-like substrate and inhibitor specificities, which is produced in vitro and on host leaves. We hypothesize that this subtilisin protease may act in concert with SNP1 and may compensate for the loss of trypsin protease activity in the SNP1-deletion mutants.
- Published
- 2003
14. A rapid and efficient method for the extraction of total DNA from mature leaves of the data palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.)
- Author
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Charles Ainsworth, Mustapha Aitchitt, and Madan Thangavelu
- Subjects
Extraction (chemistry) ,food and beverages ,Plant Science ,Biology ,DNA extraction ,Tissue culture ,Restriction enzyme ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Callus ,Botany ,Phoenix dactylifera ,Palm ,Molecular Biology ,DNA - Abstract
A method is presented for the rapid isolation of high-molecular-weight DNA from mature leaves of date palm (Phoenix dactylifera L.), using a CTAB-based buffer. The method yields up to 800 μg of DNA from 1 g of leaf tissues. The procedure was also suitable for DNA extraction from callus or buds from tissue culture. The DNA obtained through this method was a good substrate for at least seventeen restriction endonucleases. This method was also used to extract DNA from mature leaves of coconut and may be applicable to other species of palms.
- Published
- 1993
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15. DNA Profiling and Strategies for in Planta Localisation of Bacteria intimately Associated with Billbergia Magnifica ssp. Acutisepalia
- Author
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Sinclair H. Mantell, Georgios Tsoktouridis, Eleni Bantinaki, and Madan Thangavelu
- Subjects
Aechmea ,Tillandsia ,biology ,Micropropagation ,Botany ,food and beverages ,Billbergia ,biology.organism_classification ,Enrichment culture ,Bacteria ,Explant culture ,RAPD - Abstract
Billbergia, Tillandsia, Guzmania, Aechmea are examples of bromeliads with colourful foliage and floral spathes. Bromeliads are often difficult to propagate. An efficient propagation system is an essential requirement for high multiplication rates especially if it is also necessary to preserve the characteristics of hybrids and sports. Our attempts to obtain aseptic in vitro cultures of explants of Tillandsia and Billbergia from glasshouse-grown plants and to optimise a micropropagation procedure have been hindered by persistent bacterial or fungal contamination. Bacterial contamination in tissue culture is well documented [1]. Various experimental procedures including chemical sterilisation and antibiotics have been used to varying levels of success to minimise or eliminate such contamination. This study reports the effect of different chemical sterilants on the recovery by enrichment culture of bacterial species intimately associated with glasshouse-grown stock plants of the ornamental bromeliad Billbergia magnifica ssp. acutisepalia. Rapd analyses of the DNAs of 365 bacterial isolates revealed the existence of at least 35 different Rapd profile groups. Some of these bacteria also contain plasmids. The significance of these bacteria in the biology of the plant is unclear. Experiments using aseptically cultured ‘sterile’ seedlings of the mother plant are in progress to monitor the reinfestation of these bacteria, the nature of the intimate association and their localisation in plants.
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
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16. Male and female flowers of the dioecious plant sorrel show different patterns of MADS box gene expression
- Author
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J. S. Parker, Susan J. Crossley, Vicky Buchanan-Wollaston, Charles Ainsworth, and Madan Thangavelu
- Subjects
Gynoecium ,DNA, Plant ,Plant genetics ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Stamen ,Plant Development ,MADS Domain Proteins ,Plant Science ,Biology ,Genes, Plant ,Hermaphrodite ,Gene Expression Regulation, Plant ,Botany ,Primordium ,Amino Acid Sequence ,MADS-box ,Whorl (botany) ,In Situ Hybridization ,Plant Proteins ,Genetics ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,fungi ,Genes, Homeobox ,food and beverages ,Cell Biology ,Plants ,body regions ,DNA-Binding Proteins ,Perianth ,Transcription Factors ,Research Article - Abstract
Male and female flowers of the dioecious plant sorrel (Rumex acetosa) each produce three whorls of developed floral organs: two similar whorls of three perianth segments and either six stamens (in the male) or a gynoecium consisting of a fertile carpel and two sterile carpels (in the female). In the developing male flower, there is no significant proliferation of cells in the center of the flower, in the position normally occupied by the carpels of a hermaphrodite plant. In the female flower, small stamen primordia are formed. To determine whether the organ differences are associated with differences in the expression of organ identity genes, cDNA clones representing the putative homologs of B and C function MADS box genes were isolated and used in an in situ hybridization analysis. The expression of RAD1 and RAD2 (two different DEFICIENS homologs) in males and females was confined to the stamen whorl; the lack of expression in the second, inner perianth whorl correlated with the sepaloid nature of the inner whorl of perianth segments. Expression of RAP1 (a PLENA homolog) occurred in the carpel and stamen whorls in very young flower primordia from both males and females. However, as soon as the inappropriate set of organs ceased to develop, RAP1 expression became undetectable in those organs. The absence of expression of RAP1 may be the cause of the arrest in organ development or may be a consequence.
- Published
- 1995
17. Erratum: Corrigendum: Interrogation of genomes by molecular copy-number counting (MCC)
- Author
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Grace Tin-Yun Chung, Alan Forster, Terence H. Rabbitts, Richard Pannell, Madan Thangavelu, Louise Sparrow, Angelika Daser, and Paul H. Dear
- Subjects
Computer science ,Nat ,Cell Biology ,Computational biology ,Bioinformatics ,Interrogation ,Molecular Biology ,Biochemistry ,Genome ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Nat. Methods 3, 447–453 (2006). published online 23 May 2006; corrected after print 8 June 2006. Correspondence should be addressed to M. Thangavelu (mt370@hutchison-mrc.cam.ac.uk) instead of T. H. Rabbitts. The error has been corrected in the PDF version of the article.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. SED1 gene length and sequence polymorphisms in feral strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae
- Author
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Francesca Clementi, Alan Wheals, Ilaria Mannazzu, Suzanne Bowen, Paola Marinangeli, Marilena Budroni, Emanuela Simonetti, Madan Thangavelu, and Emanuela Guerra
- Subjects
Author's Correction ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Population ,Mycology ,Saccharomyces cerevisiae ,Biology ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Fungal Proteins ,Tandem repeat ,Vitis ,Amino Acid Sequence ,ORFS ,DNA, Fungal ,education ,Gene ,Alleles ,Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid ,Genetics ,education.field_of_study ,Membrane Glycoproteins ,Polymorphism, Genetic ,Base Sequence ,Sequence Homology, Amino Acid ,Ecology ,Gene Expression Profiling ,Gene Amplification ,Nucleic acid sequence ,Molecular biology ,Open reading frame ,Minisatellite ,Genetic marker ,Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The SED1 gene (YDR077W), coding for the major cell wall glycoprotein of Saccharomyces cerevisiae stationary-phase cells, contains two blocks of tandem repeat units located within two distinct regions of the nucleotide sequence. A PCR survey of the SED1 open reading frames (ORFs) of 186 previously uncharacterized grape must isolates of S. cerevisiae yielded 13 PCR profiles arising from different combinations of seven SED1 length variants in individuals homozygous or heterozygous for the gene. Comparison of the nucleotide sequences of a group of representatives of each of the seven length variants with those of S288C and the type strain, CBS1171, unequivocally identified them as SED1 alleles and provided evidence for the presence of two minisatellite-like sequences, variable in length, within the ORF of an S. cerevisiae gene. The segregation analyses of the SED1 length variants and other genetic markers in 13 isolates representative of each PCR profile suggested that molecular mechanisms involved in minisatellite expansion and contraction may be responsible for SED1 heterozygosities within a population of homothallic must isolates of S. cerevisiae.
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