2 resultados para DOMESTICATED TRANSPOSASE
em Universitätsbibliothek Kassel, Universität Kassel, Germany
Resumo:
Mobile genetische Elementen wie Transposons wurden in unbelasteten Böden nachgewiesen. Hierzu wurden unterschiedliche Ansätze gewählt: Verschiedene, unbelastete Böden wurden mittels PCR auf das Vorhandensein von Markergenen, in diesem Fall Transposasen vom Typ Tn3, Tn21 und Tn501, hin untersucht. Hierzu wurde ein System entwickelt, welches es ermöglichte die Gesamt-DNA aus verschiedensten Böden mit einem System einfach und reproduzierbar zu extrahieren und anschließend mittels PCR zu untersuchen. Die mittlere Nachweisgrenze dieses Systems lag bei 9 x 10 *3 Templates / g Boden. Ein paralleler Ansatz erfolgte, indem aus den gleichen, unbelasteten Böden Bakterien mittels Selektivmedien isoliert wurden. Diese Isolate wurden anschließend auf genetische Marker hin untersucht. Transposons, bzw. Transposasen konnten in den unbelasteten Böden in weitaus geringerer Zahl als aus belasteten Böden bekannt nachgewiesen werden. Jedoch verhielten sich die unterschiedlichen Elemente in der Verteilung wie aus belasteten Böden bekannt. Am häufigsten wurde Tn21 dann Tn501 nachgewiesen. Tn3, nach dem auch gescreent wurde, konnte nicht nachgewiesen werden. Anschließend wurden diese Böden mittels Bodensäulen unter Laborbedingungen auf die Übertragung von potentiell transponierbaren Elementen aus der autochthonen Flora hin untersucht. Mittels dieses Experimentes konnte kein transponierbares Element nachgewiesen werden. Weiterhin wurden vorhandene Boden-Bakterienkollektive auf das Vorhandensein von Transposons mittels Gensondentechnik und PCR auf Transposasen hin gescreent. Auch hier konnten wiederum Signale zu Tn21, Tn501 und in diesem Falle auch Tn3 erhalten werden. Einige dieser Isolate wurden mittels Southern-Blot und Sequenzierung näher charakterisiert. Bei den Sequenzvergleichen einer so erhaltenen 2257 bp langen Sequenz wurde diese als Transposase der Tn21-Familie mit großer Homologie zur Transposase von Tn5060 bestimmt.
Resumo:
The present survey of species diversity of cultivated plants is the first for Syria. Some cultivated species will be added in the future, because due to the civil war in Syria, it was not possible to visit the country in the frame of the present work, as initially planned. Checklists proved to be a useful tool for overviewing the cultivated plants of selected areas and allow a characterization of the state of plant genetic resources of Syria. Syria has experienced several civilizations. Man settled in this productive land since ancient times and used its resources. However, such use has led to changes in vegetation and decline of wildlife through the country, in seashore areas, interior, mountains, and grassland. Plant domestication and growing started more than 10,000 years ago in West Asia. Since then, plentiful of economic plant species were present and used by man and his domesticated animals. Forming a part of the Fertile Crescent, where many of the world’s agricultural plants have evolved, Syria is extremely rich in agrobiodiversity. Wild progenitors of wheat and barley and wild relatives of many fruit trees such as almonds and pistachio as well as forage species are still found in marginal lands and less disturbed areas. These are threatened by a wide range of human activities, notably modern, extensive agriculture, overgrazing, overcutting and urban expansion. Syria is also considered as part of one of the main centres of origin, according to Vavilov, who had collected in Syria in 1926. The first expeditions to crop fields showed the exclusive nature of cultivated plants in Syria with a high number of endemic forms. Furthermore, Syria is a part of a biodiversity hotspot. Several studies have been performed to study agrobiodiversity in different parts of Syria, but usually on wild species. Many collections have been carried out; however, they focussed preferably on cereals and pulses, and particularly on wheat, like Vavilov’s expedition. Only 30 crops make up the major part of the conserved Syrian crop plant material in the genebank, indicating that most of the remaining 7,000 species of cultivated plants and many other valuable genetic resources species have only been included on a limited scale in the genebank collections. Although a small country (185,180 km2), Syria accommodates numerous ecosystems that allow for a large diversity of plant genetic resources for agriculture ranging from cold-requiring to subtropical crops to live and thrive. Only few references are available in this respect. The aim of the present study was to complete a checklist of Syria’s cultivated plants of agriculture and horticulture excluding plants only grown as ornamental or for forestry. Furthermore, plants taken for reforestation have not been included, if they do not have also agricultural or horticultural uses. Therefore, the inclusion of plants into the checklist follows the same principles as “Mansfeld’s Encyclopedia”. Main sources of information were published literature, floras of Syria, Lebanon and the Mediterranean, as well as Syrian printed sources in Arabic and/or English, reports from FAO on agricultural statistics in Syria, and data from ICARDA and Bioversity International. In addition, personal observations gathered during professional work in the General Commission for Scientific Agricultural Research (GCSAR) in Syria (since 1989) and participation in projects were taken into account. These were: (1) A project on “Conservation and Sustainable Use of Dry Land Agrobiodiversity in the Near East” with participation of Jordan, Lebanon, Syria, and the Palestinian Authority, focussing on landraces and wild relatives of barley, wheat, lentil, alliums, feed legumes, and fruit trees (1999–2005). (2) A project for vegetable landraces (1993–1995) in collaboration with the former International Plant Genetic Resources Institute and the UN Development Programme, in which 380 local vegetable accessions were evaluated. For medicinal plants and fruit trees I was in personal contact with departments of GCSAR and the Ministry of Agriculture and Agrarian Reform, as well as with private organizations. The resulting checklist was compared with the catalogues of crop plants of Italy and a checklist of cultivated plants of Iraq. The cultivated plant species are presented in alphabetical order according to their accepted scientific names. Each entry consists of a nomenclatural part, folk names, details of plant uses, the distribution in Syria (by provinces), a textual description, and references to literature. In total, 262 species belonging to 146 genera and 57 families were identified. Within-species (intraspecific) diversity is a significant measure of the biodiversity. Intraspecific diversity for wild plants has been and remains to be well studied, but for crop plants there are only few results. Mansfeld’s method is an actual logical contribution to such studies. Among the families, the following have the highest number of crop species: Leguminosae (34 spp.), Rosaceae (24), Gramineae (18), Labiatae (18), Compositae (14), Cruciferae (14), Cucurbitaceae (11), Rutaceae (10), Malvaceae (9), Alliaceae (7), and Anacardiaceae (7). The establishment of an effective programme for the maintenance of plant genetic resources in Syria started in the mid-1970s. This programme considered ex situ and in situ collection of the genetic resources of various field crops, fruit trees and vegetables. From a plant genetic resources viewpoint, it is clear that the homegarden is an important location for the cultivation of so-called neglected and underutilized species (neglected from a research side and underutilized from a larger economic side). Such species have so far not received much care from ecologists, botanists and agronomists, and they are considerably under-represented in genebanks.