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Acknowledgements to references
Author(s) -
Elling,
Mitreva,
Recknor,
Gai,
Martin,
Maier,
McDermott,
Hewezi,
Bird,
Davis,
Hussey,
Nettleton,
McCarter,
Baum
Publication year - 1981
Publication title -
archives of microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.648
H-Index - 102
eISSN - 1432-072X
pISSN - 0302-8933
DOI - 10.1007/bf00414606
Subject(s) - microbial ecology , ecology , biology , geography , bacteria , paleontology
Background The soybean cyst nematode Heterodera glycines is the most important parasite in soybean production worldwide. A comprehensive analysis of largescale gene expression changes throughout the development of plantparasitic nematodes has been lacking to date. Results We report an extensive genomic analysis of H. glycines, beginning with the generation of 20,100 expressed sequence tags (ESTs). Indepth analysis of these ESTs plus approximately 1,900 previously published sequences predicted 6,860 unique H. glycines genes and allowed a classification by function using InterProScan. Expression profiling of all 6,860 genes throughout the H. glycines life cycle was undertaken using the Affymetrix Soybean Genome Array GeneChip. Our data sets and results represent a comprehensive resource for molecular studies of H. glycines. Demonstrating the power of this resource, we were able to address whether arrested development in the Caenorhabditis elegans dauer larva and the H. glycines infective secondstage juvenile (J2) exhibits shared gene expression profiles. We determined that the gene expression profiles associated with the C. elegans dauer pathway are not uniformly conserved in H. glycines and that the expression profiles of genes for metabolic enzymes of C. elegans dauer larvae and H. glycines infective J2 are dissimilar. Conclusion Our results indicate that hallmark gene expression patterns and metabolism features are not shared in the developmentally arrested life stages of C. elegans and H. glycines, suggesting that developmental arrest in these two nematode species has undergone more divergent evolution than previously thought and pointing to the need for detailed genomic analyses of individual parasite species.

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