Title of article
Beyond Arabidopsis. Translational Biology Meets Evolutionary Developmental Biology
Author/Authors
Irish، Vivian F. نويسنده , , Benfey، Philip N. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages
-610
From page
611
To page
0
Abstract
Developmental processes shape plant morphologies, which constitute important adaptive traits selected for during evolution. Identifying the genes that act in developmental pathways and determining how they are modified during evolution is the focus of the field of evolutionary developmental biology, or evo-devo. Knowledge of genetic pathways in the plant model Arabidopsis serves as the starting point for investigating how the toolkit of developmental pathways has been used and reused to form different plant body plans. One productive approach is to identify genes in other species that are orthologous to genes known to control developmental pathways in Arabidopsis and then determine what changes have occurred in the protein coding sequence or in the geneʹs expression to produce an altered morphology. A second approach relies on natural variation among wild populations or crop plants. Natural variation can be exploited to identify quantitative trait loci that underlie important developmental traits and, thus, define those genes that are responsible for adaptive changes. The possibility of applying comparative genomics approaches to Arabidopsis and related species promises profound new insights into the interplay of evolution and development.
Keywords
Transferred potential , Dolphins , Chimpanzees , Transcranial magnetic stimulation , Auditory stimulation , Visual evoked potential , Patterned photostimulation , Nonlocality , Consciousness
Journal title
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Serial Year
2004
Journal title
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY
Record number
113598
Link To Document