Most popular articles
Everything About Peaches. Clemson University Cooperative Extension Service Everything About Peaches Website: whether you are a professional or backyard peach...
Mission Statement. For the sake of mankind and the world as a whole a further increase of the sustainability...
Newsletter 9: July 2013 - Temperate Fruits in the Tropics and Subtropics. Download your copy of the Working Group Temperate...
USA Walnut varieties. The Walnut Germplasm Collection of the University of California, Davis (USA). A description of the Collection and a History...
China Walnut varieties.

Articles

THE PINEAPPLE EST SEQUENCING AND MICROARRAY PROJECT

Article number
702_5
Pages
47 – 50
Language
English
Abstract
We have initiated an EST sequencing project to survey a range of expressed sequences from green fruit, yellow fruit, roots, and root-knot nematode infected root/gall tissues.
In total, 5681 edited EST sequences were retrieved.
Clone redundancy was high in the fruit libraries, with the combined fruit 1548 clone sequences clustering into just 634 contigs comprising 191 consensus sequences and 443 singletons.
Half of all fruit EST clone sequences clustered within approximately 14 and 9% of contigs from green unripe and yellow ripe libraries respectively, indicating that a small subset of genes dominates the majority of the transcriptome.
The root and root/gall libraries had lower levels of redundancy than the fruit libraries.
Half of the root/gall ESTs clustered within approximately 40% of all contigs, indicating the roots possess a more complex transcriptome.
Contig assembly and cluster analysis revealed major differences in the abundant gene sequences expressed between the unripe green and the ripe yellow fruit tissues, or gene sequences expressed between the weeks 1-4 and weeks 5-10 nematode infected gall vascular cylinder libraries.

Publication
Authors
R. Moyle, J. Ripi, D.J. Fairbairn, M. Crowe, J.R. Botella
Keywords
fruit ripening, nematode, transgenic pineapple plants
Full text
Online Articles (26)
E.P. Perez | D.M. Sether | M.J. Melzer | J.L. Busto | C. Nagai | J.S. Hu
F.V.D. Souza | T.L. Soares | J.R.S. Cabral | D.H. Reinhardt | J.L. Cardoso | D.A. Benjamin
R. Moyle | J. Ripi | D.J. Fairbairn | M. Crowe | J.R. Botella
D.H. Reinhardt | C.O. de Almeida | L. da Costa Vilar
C.-H. Lin | C.-S. Kuan | Y.-M. Hsu | M.-L. Lin | H.-T. Hsu | C.-W. Yu | D.P. Bartholomew
J.D. Carlier | D. Nancheva | J.M. Leitão | G. Coppens d'Eeckenbrugge
F.V.D. Souza | J.R.S. Cabral | J.A. dos Santos-Serejo | A.P. de Matos | D.H. Reinhardt | G.A.P. da Cunha | F.R. Ferreira | J.A. Pereira
A.P. Fávero | F.R. Ferreira | J.R.S. Cabral | S.E. Noronha
J.A. Silva | R. Hamasaki | R. Paull | R. Ogoshi | D.P. Bartholomew | S. Fukuda | N.V. Hue | G. Uehara | G.Y Tsuji
M.J.M. Ramos | P.H. Monnerat | A.J.C. de Carvalho | J.L.A. Pinto | J.A. da Silva