News

Vampires, witchweeds and the Strigolactones

Strigolactones are a class of carotenoid derived compounds. As the most recently described class of plant hormones they are reported to play an ever expanding role in plant development. As a plant hormone, they act like signaling molecules which communicate with other plant hormone systems including auxins, cytokininins and ABA. Equally significant is their role in promoting symbiotic relationships between plants and soil microbes, a key aspect of plant’s mineral nutrition. Interestingly, name “Strigolactone” is derived from this latter role.

Image: 

Striga (witchweed) parasitizing a maize plant. Source: http://www.parasiticplants.siu.edu/Orobanchaceae/images/Striga.asia2.JPEG

Rice gene identifiers in Plant Reactome pathways

Plant Reactome now offers a tab-delimited file containing curated gene product identifiers in rice, grouped by pathway. This data includes IRGSP (RAP/Os), MSU (LOC), and Uniprot identifiers.

Get the data here.

INTERNET OUTAGE on Sunday, June 8 at 11:00 pm EDT

Please be advised that there will be a network upgrade affecting Gramene servers (internet and FTP) on Sunday, June 8th beginning at 11:00PM EDT and concluding at 1:00AM EDT Monday, June 9th.

Plan accordingly so that your work with the Gramene website and services is not affected by the temporary (~2h) internet outage.

Plant Reactome Projection Comparisons

We recently undertook an effort to project our manually curated Plant Reactome Oryza sativa (rice) pathway data onto Zea mays (maize) and Arabidopsis thaliana, and we were curious to compare gene-level projection results derived using both Compara and Inparanoid methodologies.

Image: 

Breeding bioinformatician open position with SGN

  • Title: Breeding Bioinformatician/Programmer

Gramene database build 41 released

The Gramene Team is pleased to announce its release #41. In collaboration with Ensembl Plants we are providing in this release:

Gramene at the Maize Genetics Conference 2014

For the first time in the context of the Maize Genetics Conference (Beijing, China on March 13-16, 2014), Gramene seized the opportunity to present a workshop for the maize community. The meeting brought about 600 maize researchers from around the World. Among those, about 100 meeting participants from Asia, Europe, and North America attended the Gramene workshop. The workshop provided an overview of Gramene’s comparative genomics and variation resources, including the Ensembl genome browser, BLAST and BioMart.

PAG 2014: Some Highlights

22nd Plant and Animal Genome conference was held from Jan 11 to 16 2014, in San Diego CA.

Gramene workshop at the Maize Genetics Conference 2014 — See you in Beijing!

Please join the Gramene Team for their upcoming workshop at the Maize Genetics Conference 2014!

Learn the latest updates to Gramene's comparative genomics and pathways visualization/mining tools to aid your research of plant models and crops.

This workshop will give a broad overview of Gramene's database resources and demonstrate many specific topics like how to:

Tenure-track faculty position in Plant-Microbe Interactions at Oregon State University

The Department of Botany and Plant Pathology
(http://bpp.oregonstate.edu/) at Oregon State University (OSU) seeks applicants for a 9-month, full-time
(1.0 FTE), tenure-track faculty position in Plant-Microbe Interactions.
(position link: http://jobs.oregonstate.edu/applicants/Central?quickFind=63597)

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - blogs