Journal article
Domestication of rice has reduced the occurrence of transposable elements within gene coding regions
X Li, K Guo, X Zhu, P Chen, Y Li, G Xie, L Wang, Y Wang, S Persson, L Peng
BMC Genomics | BMC | Published : 2017
Abstract
Background: Transposable elements (TEs) are prominent features in many plant genomes, and patterns of TEs in closely related rice species are thus proposed as an ideal model to study TEs roles in the context of plant genome evolution. As TEs may contribute to improved rice growth and grain quality, it is of pivotal significance for worldwide food security and biomass production. Results: We analyzed three cultivated rice species and their closest five wild relatives for distribution and content of TEs in their genomes. Despite that the three cultivar rice species contained similar copies and more total TEs, their genomes contained much longer TEs as compared to their wild relatives. Notably,..
View full abstractGrants
Awarded by National Science Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported in part by grants from the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universitiesn of China (Program No. 2662015PY018), the 111 Project of Ministry of Education of China (B08032), the National 973 Pre-project (2010CB134401), and the National Transgenic Project (2009ZX08009-119B). SP was supported by a R@MAP Professor grant at University of Melbourne and a ChangJiang scholarship (52204-14004).