ISSN: 2165-8056
USDA-ARS Genomics and Bioinformatics Research Unit, Stoneville, Mississippi, USA
Dr. Sheron A. Simpson a Professor of Behavioural Sciences and Health in the MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit. she co-lead the Unit's Complexity programme. she also Head of the Population Health Research Facility, which supports the design, planning and delivery of high quality community based research and is part of the Glasgow Clinical Trials Unit.
Research Article
Mitogenome and Nuclear-encoded Fungicide-target Genes of Thecaphora frezii - Causal Agent of Peanut Smut
Author(s): Renee S. Arias*, Luis I. Cazon, Alicia N. Massa, Brian E. Scheffler, Victor S. Sobolev, Marshall C. Lamb, Mary V. Duke, Sheron A. Simpson, Cinthia Conforto, Juan A. Paredes, Juan H. Soave, Mario I. Buteler and Alejandro M. Rago
Background: Thecaphora frezii Carranza and Lindquist causes smut disease in peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) resulting in up to 35% yield losses. Fungicides have shown ineffective in controlling the disease; whereas research on the molecular basis of that fungicide resistance has been hindered because of the lack of genetic information about T. frezii. The goal of this work was to provide molecular information about fungicide-target loci in T. frezii, including its mitochondrial genome (mitogenome) and critical nuclear-encoded genes.
Results: Here we report the complete annotated mitogenome of T. frezii, a 123,773 bp molecule containing the standard 14 genes that form part of mitochondrial complexes I, III, IV and V, 22 transfer RNAs, small and large subunits of ribosomal RNA, DNA polymerase, ribonucl.. View More»