angela baldo - Academia.edu (original) (raw)
Papers by angela baldo
BMC Plant Biology, Jul 8, 2014
This work tests a 250 bp intergenic spacer between the H2A and H2B histone genes in twelve specie... more This work tests a 250 bp intergenic spacer between the H2A and H2B histone genes in twelve species of Drosophila from the subgenus radiation Sophophora for its phylogenetic resolving power. Like rDNA, histone are repeated in invertebrates and undergo concerted evolution. Histones offer a novel advantage relative to rDNA in that they are translated as well as transcribed. Universal primers anchored in coding regions were used to amplify and sequence the spacer between H2A and H2B. This spacer contains promoters for which we have functional information for both of these divergently transcribed genes. This information aids in alignment of the sequences, which identifies a likely but previously unrecognized regulatory region (subsequently confirmed by other research). Potential for single-stranded DNA stem loops in the spacer which may participate in transcriptional regulation is examined. Parsimony, distance, and maximum likelihood methods, under a variety of assumptions, successfully retrieve the corroborated phylogeny. While the addition of a similar number of bases of flanking coding regions improves support for the corroborated phylogeny, the carefully aligned spacer alone is sufficient under certain assumptions. Given the expense of DNA sequencing, and the amount of information it contains, the 250 bp H2A-H2B intergenic spacer is a good candidate for phylogenetic inference of invertebrate radiations less than fifty million years diverged.
Journal of Virology, Sep 1, 1999
Molecular Biology and Evolution, Nov 1, 1999
BMC Plant Biology, Jan 4, 2010
World Scientific Publishing Company eBooks, Apr 1, 2008
Molecular Breeding, Nov 1, 2005
Acta horticulturae, Aug 1, 2011
Theoretical and Applied Genetics, Jan 20, 2009
Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, Sep 1, 2006
BMC Evolutionary Biology, Jul 5, 2013
BMC Plant Biology, Jul 8, 2014
This work tests a 250 bp intergenic spacer between the H2A and H2B histone genes in twelve specie... more This work tests a 250 bp intergenic spacer between the H2A and H2B histone genes in twelve species of Drosophila from the subgenus radiation Sophophora for its phylogenetic resolving power. Like rDNA, histone are repeated in invertebrates and undergo concerted evolution. Histones offer a novel advantage relative to rDNA in that they are translated as well as transcribed. Universal primers anchored in coding regions were used to amplify and sequence the spacer between H2A and H2B. This spacer contains promoters for which we have functional information for both of these divergently transcribed genes. This information aids in alignment of the sequences, which identifies a likely but previously unrecognized regulatory region (subsequently confirmed by other research). Potential for single-stranded DNA stem loops in the spacer which may participate in transcriptional regulation is examined. Parsimony, distance, and maximum likelihood methods, under a variety of assumptions, successfully retrieve the corroborated phylogeny. While the addition of a similar number of bases of flanking coding regions improves support for the corroborated phylogeny, the carefully aligned spacer alone is sufficient under certain assumptions. Given the expense of DNA sequencing, and the amount of information it contains, the 250 bp H2A-H2B intergenic spacer is a good candidate for phylogenetic inference of invertebrate radiations less than fifty million years diverged.
Journal of Virology, Sep 1, 1999
Molecular Biology and Evolution, Nov 1, 1999
BMC Plant Biology, Jan 4, 2010
World Scientific Publishing Company eBooks, Apr 1, 2008
Molecular Breeding, Nov 1, 2005
Acta horticulturae, Aug 1, 2011
Theoretical and Applied Genetics, Jan 20, 2009
Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, Sep 1, 2006
BMC Evolutionary Biology, Jul 5, 2013