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The Maize ropD Gene Christine Neou Dr. John Fowler Botany and Plant Pathology
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Why use corn? Better understanding of how corn and other plants grow and develop
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Why use corn? Better understanding of how corn and other plants grow and develop Learn mechanisms by which plants signal a response to stress or respond to disease
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Why use corn? Better understanding of how corn and other plants grow and develop Learn mechanisms by which plants signal a response to stress or respond to disease Use what we learn to perhaps breed plants that are better equipped to respond against stressors
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G proteins - signaling molecules that bind GTP Family Ras Rho Rab Arf Ran
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G proteins - signaling molecules that bind GTP Family Ras Rho Rab Arf Ran Subfamily Rho Rac Cdc42Rop
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G proteins - signaling molecules that bind GTP Family Ras Rho Rab Arf Ran Subfamily Rho Rac Cdc42Rop (Rho of Plants)
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Rop GTPases in Signaling Pathways Rop GDP GTP INACTIVE ACTIVE
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Rop GTPases in Signal Pathways Binding of effector molecule Rop GDP GTP INACTIVE ACTIVE
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Rop GTPases in Signal Pathways Binding of effector molecule Signal for growth, differentiation or survival Rop GDP GTP INACTIVE ACTIVE
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The Role of Rops in Corn ??? Function not known Question: What is the role of Rops in plant growth and development? At least 9 rops in corn
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The ropD genetic map
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Mutator Transposons
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Exons and Introns Exons - coding region Intron - sequences that are spliced out
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Goals Identify plants homozygous for the five alleles
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Goals Identify plants homozygous for the five alleles Characterize the five identified alleles by linking to a phenotype
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Goals Identify plants homozygous for the five alleles Characterize the five identified alleles by linking to a phenotype Why homozygous plants? They are the only plants that will exhibit a mutant phenotype.
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Genotyping by PCR DNA extraction Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) 3 primers used: 2 gene specific primers (GSP) Mu primer
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Genotyping by PCR GSP DF3 located upstream of mutation
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Genotyping by PCR GSP DF3 located upstream of mutation DR5 located downstream of mutation
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Genotyping by PCR GSP DF3 located upstream of mutation DR5 located downstream of mutation Mu anneals to inverted repeats of transposon
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Example: Genotyping of mc3 mutation 1 2 3 4 Lanes 1.DNA ladder 2.Wild type 3.Homozygote 4.Heterozygote Agarose gel of genotyping PCRWild type Homozygote Heterozygote
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Example: Genotyping of mc3 mutation 1 2 3 4 Lanes 1.DNA ladder 2.Wild type 3.Homozygote 4.Heterozygote Agarose gel of genotyping PCRWild type Homozygote Heterozygote
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Example: Genotyping of mc3 mutation 1 2 3 4 Lanes 1.DNA ladder 2.Wild type 3.Homozygote 4.Heterozygote Agarose gel of genotyping PCRWild type Homozygote Heterozygote
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Results of Genotyping Mutation# genotyped# of homozygotes m1 520 m2 151 mc2 101 mc3 378 mc4 91
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Example Phenotypes
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Epidermal cells of leaf tissue Wild type cells - mostly straight rows of cells with stomata spread evenly
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Epidermal cells of leaf tissue Wild type - mostly straight rows, very few areas of disorganization Homozygote - larger areas of disorganization
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Epidermal cells at high magnification Wild typeHomozygote
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RNA Mature RNA contains only exons RNA cDNA Successful extraction of RNA from one sample
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Conclusions Observations have yielded no obvious mutant organismal phenotype Epidermal cell experiments suggest a cell phenotype for homozygous plants Preliminary data from RNA experiments are promising, experiments are still ongoing
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The future… Continue the experiments through the rest of the program and through the fall Continue looking for mutant phenotypes for homozygous plants Use a computer program to analyze epidermal cells from more plants Get more data from RNA experiments
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Special Thanks to Howard Hughes Medical Institute National Science Foundation John Fowler and Lab
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