Abstract Detail
A Colloquium Honoring Leslie D. Gottlieb Pichersky, Eran [1]. From gene duplications in Clarkia to scent genes everywhere. Working in Leslie Gottlieb’s lab I was made abundantly aware of the prevalence of gene duplications in plants– a phenomenon not really appreciated at the time by most investigators. Furthermore, the contribution to plant diversity achieved via divergence of duplicated genes became my research theme throughout my scientific career. As a graduate student with Leslie I first met Clarkia breweri, the only Clarkia species to emit floral scent, and when I set up my own lab at the University of Michigan in the same department where Leslie had received his Ph.D. a generation earlier, I went back to look for the scent genes in C. breweri. As Leslie would have predicted, many of these genes were derived by duplication from genes encoding enzymes for the synthesis of non-scent chemicals. Broader Impacts:
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1 - University of Michigan, Mol Cell Dev Biol, 830 N. University St., Ann Arbor, Mi, 48109, USA
Keywords: Clarkia Gene duplications Scent.
Presentation Type: Symposium or Colloquium Presentation Session: C1 Location: Grand Ballroom A/Riverside Hilton Date: Monday, July 29th, 2013 Time: 9:15 AM Number: C1004 Abstract ID:191 Candidate for Awards:None |