An overall picture comparing the repetitive components of the genomes of three Quercus species was obtained by genome skimming with Illumina sequence reads. Read sets of Q. lobata, Q. robur, and Q. suber species were subjected to hybrid clustering in order to assemble a repeatome of the Quercus genus and to annotate it. The repeatome was composed of 8573 clusters. The abundance of repeated sequences in the three species was assessed by mapping Illumina reads of each species onto the repeatome. The repetitive portion of the genome was similar among the three species. The most abundant repetitive sequences were long terminal repeat-retrotransposons. Copia elements were overrepresented when compared with Gypsy ones. The most abundant retrotran...
Abstract Background The repetitive content of the genome, once considered to be “junk DNA”, is in fa...
In eukaryotic genomes, cycles of repeat expansion and removal lead to large-scale genomic changes an...
© Copyright 2015 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists. Taxonomic relationships between North...
An overall picture comparing the repetitive components of the genomes of three Quercus species was o...
Genomic resources have recently been developed for a number of species of Fagaceae, with the purpose...
Repetitive elements (RE) and transposons (TE) can comprise up to 80% of some plant genomes and may b...
Oaks, chestnuts, and beeches are economically important species of the Fagaceae. To understand the r...
More than 70 trees belonging to the morphologically distinguishable species Quercus robur L and Quer...
The genus Quercus L. contains several of the most economically important species for timber producti...
The eastern North American white oaks, a complex of approximately 16 potentially interbreeding speci...
<div><p>The differential accumulation and elimination of repetitive DNA are key drivers of genome si...
Quercus is an economically important and phylogenetically complex genus in the family Fagaceae. Due ...
The differential accumulation and elimination of repetitive DNA are key drivers of genome size varia...
Hipp AL, Whittemore AT, Garner M, et al. GENOMIC IDENTITY OF WHITE OAK SPECIES IN AN EASTERN NORTH A...
BACKGROUND: Repetitive DNA motifs - not coding genetic information and repeated millions to hundreds...
Abstract Background The repetitive content of the genome, once considered to be “junk DNA”, is in fa...
In eukaryotic genomes, cycles of repeat expansion and removal lead to large-scale genomic changes an...
© Copyright 2015 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists. Taxonomic relationships between North...
An overall picture comparing the repetitive components of the genomes of three Quercus species was o...
Genomic resources have recently been developed for a number of species of Fagaceae, with the purpose...
Repetitive elements (RE) and transposons (TE) can comprise up to 80% of some plant genomes and may b...
Oaks, chestnuts, and beeches are economically important species of the Fagaceae. To understand the r...
More than 70 trees belonging to the morphologically distinguishable species Quercus robur L and Quer...
The genus Quercus L. contains several of the most economically important species for timber producti...
The eastern North American white oaks, a complex of approximately 16 potentially interbreeding speci...
<div><p>The differential accumulation and elimination of repetitive DNA are key drivers of genome si...
Quercus is an economically important and phylogenetically complex genus in the family Fagaceae. Due ...
The differential accumulation and elimination of repetitive DNA are key drivers of genome size varia...
Hipp AL, Whittemore AT, Garner M, et al. GENOMIC IDENTITY OF WHITE OAK SPECIES IN AN EASTERN NORTH A...
BACKGROUND: Repetitive DNA motifs - not coding genetic information and repeated millions to hundreds...
Abstract Background The repetitive content of the genome, once considered to be “junk DNA”, is in fa...
In eukaryotic genomes, cycles of repeat expansion and removal lead to large-scale genomic changes an...
© Copyright 2015 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists. Taxonomic relationships between North...