Project description:Hordeum vulgare is one of the first domesticated grains in the world and it has been reported that variations in the light environment have a substantial effect on barley plant development and biological processes. High-throughput RNA-Seq study was performed to investigate the complex transcriptome network required for photomorphogenesis in barley. Seedlings were grown in dark and light conditions and three biological replicates were sampled from each condition. Six libraries from poly-A rich mRNA fraction were subjected to 51bp single-end RNA-seq sequencing.
Project description:We hypothesized that the genome segments of cultivated barley should show certain similarity with its ancestral wild barley. Instead of whole genome sequences, we employed RNA-Seq to investigated the genomic origin of modern cultivated barley using some representative wild barley genotypes from the Near East and Tibet, and representative world-wide selections of cultivated barley.
Project description:A DNA microarray analysis detected large-scale changes of gene expression in response to Cd stress with a substantial difference between the two barley genotypes differing in Cd tolerance and accumulation. Cd stress led to higher expression of genes involved in transport, carbohydrate metabolism and signal transduction in the low-grain-Cd-accumulating genotype. Novel transporter genes such as zinc transporter genes were identified as being associated with low Cd accumulation. We used microarrays to understand the mechanism of low Cd accumulation in crops which is crucial for sustainable safe food production in Cd-contaminated soils.