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Publication Abstract

Structure and Evolution of Cereal Genomes

Paterson, A. H., Bowers, J. E., Peterson, D. G., Estill, J. C., & Chapman, B. A. (2003). Structure and Evolution of Cereal Genomes. Current Opinion in Genetics and Development. 13(6), 644-650.

The cereal species, of central importance to our diet, began to diverge 50–70 million years ago. For the past few thousand years, these species have undergone largely parallel selection regimes associated with domestication and improvement. The rice genome sequence provides a platform for organizing information about diverse cereals, and together with genetic maps and sequence samples from other cereals is yielding new insights into both the shared and the independent dimensions of cereal evolution. New data and population-based approaches are identifying genes that have been involved in cereal improvement. Reduced-representation sequencing promises to accelerate gene discovery in many large-genome cereals, and to better link the under-explored genomes of ‘orphan’ cereals with state-of-the-art knowledge.