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Sridevi Sureshkumar, Marco Todesco, Korbinian Schneeberger, Ramya Harilal, Sureshkumar Balasubramanian, and Detlef Weigel (2009)

A genetic defect caused by a triplet repeat expansion in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Science, 323(5917):1060-3.

Variation in the length of simple DNA triplet repeats has been linked to phenotypic variability in microbes and to several human disorders. Population-level forces driving triplet repeat contraction and expansion in multicellular organisms are, however, not well understood. We have identified a triplet repeat-associated genetic defect in an Arabidopsis thaliana variety collected from the wild. The Bur-0 strain carries a dramatically expanded TTC/GAA repeat in the intron of the ISOPROPYL MALATE ISOMERASE LARGE SUB UNIT1 (IIL1; At4g13430) gene. The repeat expansion causes an environment-dependent reduction in IIL1 activity and severely impairs growth of this strain, whereas contractionof the expanded repeat can reverse the detrimental phenotype. The Bur-0 IIL1 defect thus presents a genetically tractable model for triplet repeat expansionsand their variability in natural populations.

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by Detlef Weigel last modified Apr 28, 2009 12:54 PM
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