2012
DOI: 10.1104/pp.112.204404
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Genome-Wide Analysis ofStowaway-Like MITEs in Wheat Reveals High Sequence Conservation, Gene Association, and Genomic Diversification    

Abstract: The diversity and evolution of wheat (Triticum-Aegilops group) genomes is determined, in part, by the activity of transposable elements that constitute a large fraction of the genome (up to 90%). In this study, we retrieved sequences from publicly available wheat databases, including a 454-pyrosequencing database, and analyzed 18,217 insertions of 18 Stowaway-like miniature inverted-repeat transposable element (MITE) families previously characterized in wheat that together account for approximately 1.3 Mb of s… Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Twenty microsatellite sequences in 15 populations of Triticum dicoccoides from Israel and Turkey showed that different distribution patterns of simple sequence repeat alleles (Fahima et al, 2002). The sequences of Stowawaylike transposable element families displayed high conservation, genomic diversification, and significant differences in the methylation status of the insertion sites in diploid, tetraploid, and hexaploid wheat (Yaakov et al, 2013). These reports suggest that evolution of repetitive sequences can be affected by both the genomic and environmental context.…”
Section: Mechanisms Underlying the Evolution Of Repetitive Sequences mentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Twenty microsatellite sequences in 15 populations of Triticum dicoccoides from Israel and Turkey showed that different distribution patterns of simple sequence repeat alleles (Fahima et al, 2002). The sequences of Stowawaylike transposable element families displayed high conservation, genomic diversification, and significant differences in the methylation status of the insertion sites in diploid, tetraploid, and hexaploid wheat (Yaakov et al, 2013). These reports suggest that evolution of repetitive sequences can be affected by both the genomic and environmental context.…”
Section: Mechanisms Underlying the Evolution Of Repetitive Sequences mentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Computational identification of MITEs was carried out following the method described previously (Yaakov et al, 2013a) with some small modifications. A MITE Analysis Kit (Yang & Hall, 2003) was used to search the MITEs and the flanking sequences with the identified MITEs in TREP 10 as the query and the survey sequences of group 7 chromosomes as the database, respectively.…”
Section: Computational Identification Of Mitesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This biological feature makes the wheat genomic study a huge challenge, but it also appears to be a good model for chromosome interaction and polyploidization study (Berkman et al, 2011;Nie et al, 2012). Furthermore, it was found that the repetitive sequences occupied $80% of the whole genome, which offer a useful platform for the study of the effect of "genomic stress" on the activity of repetitive elements, especially transposable elements (TEs) (Cantu et al, 2010;Middleton et al, 2013;Yaakov et al, 2013a).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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