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URI permanente para esta coleçãohttps://locus.ufv.br/handle/123456789/11847

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    Mapeamento de QTL para conteúdos de proteína e óleo em soja
    (Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, 2010-05) Rodrigues, Josiane Isabela da Silva; Miranda, Fábio Demolinari de; Ferreira, Adésio; Borges, Leandro Luiz; Ferreira, Marcia Flores da Silva; Good-God, Pedro Ivo Vieira; Piovesan, Newton Deniz; Barros, Everaldo Gonçalves de; Cruz, Cosme Damião; Moreira, Maurilio Alves
    O objetivo deste trabalho foi detectar e mapear locos de caracteres quantitativos (QTL) que afetam os conteúdos de proteína e óleo em soja (Glycine max L. Merr.). Plantas F2, derivadas do cruzamento entre a linhagem CS3032PTA276 e a variedade UFVS2012, foram cultivadas em casa de vegetação e forneceram as folhas para extração e análise de DNA. Quarenta e oito marcadores microssatélites (SSR) polimórficos foram avaliados na população F2. A avaliação dos fenótipos foi realizada em 207 famílias das progênies F2:3, em um delineamento em blocos ao acaso, com três repetições, conduzido em Viçosa, MG, em 2006. Foram detectados quatro QTL associados ao conteúdo de proteína, nos grupos de ligação D1a, G, A1, e I, e três QTL associados ao conteúdo de óleo, nos grupos A1, I e O. A variação fenotípica explicada pelos QTL variou de 6,24 a 18,94% e 17,26 a 25,93%, respectivamente, para os conteúdos de proteína e óleo. Foram detectados novos QTL associados aos conteúdos de proteína e óleo, além dos previamente relatados em outros estudos. Regiões distintas das atualmente conhecidas podem estar envolvidas no controle genético do teor de proteína e óleo na soja.
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    Differentially expressed proteins during an incompatible interaction between common bean and the fungus Pseudocercospora griseola
    (Molecular Breeding, 2013-07-30) Borges, Leandro Luiz; Santana, Fernanda Abreu; Castro, Isabel Samila Lima; Arruda, Klever Márcio Antunes; Ramos, Humberto Josué de Oliveira; Moreira, Maurilio Alves; Barros, Everaldo Gonçalves de
    The common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is the main source of protein and an important source of minerals in several countries around the world. Angular leaf spot, caused by the fungus Pseudocercospora griseola, is one of the major diseases of the common bean. In this work, we used two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry to analyze alterations in the proteome of common bean leaves challenged with an incompatible race of P. griseola. Twenty-three differentially expressed proteins were detected in leaves of cultivar AND 277 collected at 12, 24 and 48 h after inoculation. The proteins were digested with trypsin and submitted to MALDI-TOF/TOF and MicrOTOF-Q electrospray mass spectrometry. Nineteen of them were identified upon MS/MS fragmentation. Most of these proteins are involved with amino acid metabolism, terpenoid metabolism, phenylpropanoid biosynthesis, antioxidant systems, vitamin and cofactor metabolism, plant–pathogen interaction, carbohydrate metabolism, photosynthesis, or genetic information processing, showing that the interaction in this pathosystem affects different genes from various metabolic pathways and processes.
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    More Cercospora species infect soybeans across the Americas than meets the eye
    (Plos One, 2015-08-07) Soares, Ana Paula Gomes; Guillin, Eduardo A.; Borges, Leandro Luiz; Silva, Amanda C. T. da; Almeida, Álvaro M. R. de; Grijalba, Pablo E.; Gottlieb, Alexandra M.; Bluhm, Burton H.; Oliveira, Luiz Orlando de
    Diseases of soybean caused by Cercospora spp. are endemic throughout the world’s soybean production regions. Species diversity in the genus Cercospora has been underestimated due to overdependence on morphological characteristics, symptoms, and host associations. Currently, only two species (Cercospora kikuchii and C. sojina) are recognized to infect soybean; C. kikuchii causes Cercospora leaf blight (CLB) and purple seed stain (PSS), whereas C. sojina causes frogeye leaf spot. To assess cryptic speciation among pathogens causing CLB and PSS, phylogenetic and phylogeographic analyses were performed with isolates from the top three soybean producing countries (USA, Brazil, and Argentina; collectively accounting for ~80% of global production). Eight nuclear genes and one mitochondrial gene were partially sequenced and analyzed. Additionally, amino acid substitutions conferring fungicide resistance were surveyed, and the production of cercosporin (a polyketide toxin produced by many Cercospora spp.) was assessed. From these analyses, the long-held assumption of C. kikuchii as the single causal agent of CLB and PSS was rejected experimentally. Four cercosporin-producing lineages were uncovered with origins (about 1 Mya) predicted to predate agriculture. Some of the Cercospora spp. newly associated with CLB and PSS appear to represent undescribed species; others were not previously reported to infect soybeans. Lineage 1, which contained the ex-type strain of C. kikuchii, was monophyletic and occurred in Argentina and Brazil. In contrast, lineages 2 and 3 were polyphyletic and contained wide-host range species complexes. Lineage 4 was monophyletic, thrived in Argentina and the USA, and included the generalist Cercospora cf. flagellaris. Interlineage recombination was detected, along with a high frequency of mutations linked to fungicide resistance in lineages 2 and 3. These findings point to cryptic Cercospora species as underappreciated global considerations for soybean production and phytosanitary vigilance, and urge a reassessment of host-specificity as a diagnostic tool for Cercospora.