Titel
Identification of conserved core xylem gene sets: conifer cDNA microarray development, transcript profiling and computational analyses
Verfasser
Nathalie Pavy (*)
Brian Boyle (*)
Colleen Nelson (*)
Charles Paule
Isabelle Giguère
Sébastien Caron
Lee S. Parsons
Nancy Dallaire
Frank Bedon
Hugo Bérubé
Janice Cooke
John Mackay
Erscheinungsort
Malden
Verlag
Blackwell Science Ltd.
Erscheinungsjahr
2008
Illustrationen
5 Abb., 7 Tab., 50 Lit. Ang.
Material
Artikel aus einer ZeitschriftUnselbständiges Werk
Standardsignatur
12243
Datensatznummer
200151723
Quelle
New Phytologist 2008, 180(4); S. 766-786
Abstract
One approach for investigating the molecular basis of wood formation is to integrate microarray profiling data sets and sequence analyses, comparing tree species with model plants such as. A microarray of 10 400 low-redundancy sequences was designed starting from white spruce (Picea glauca (Moench.) Voss) cDNAs. Computational procedures that were developed to ensure broad transcriptome coverage and efficient PCR amplification were used to select cDNA clones, which were re-sequenced in the microarray manufacture process. White spruce transcript profiling experiments that compared secondary xylem to phloem and needles identified 360 xylem-preferential gene sequences. The functional annotations of all differentially expressed sequences were highly consistent with the results of similar analyses carried out in angiosperm trees and herbaceous plants. Computational analyses comparing the spruce microarray sequences and core xylem gene sets from Arabidopsis identified 31 transcripts that were highly conserved in angiosperms and gymnosperms, in terms of both sequence and xylem expression. Several other spruce sequences have not previously been linked to xylem differentiation (including genes encoding TUBBY-like domain proteins (TLPs) and a gibberellin insensitive (gai) gene sequence) or were shown to encode proteins of unknown function encompassing diverse conserved domains of unknown function.