Browsing by Author "Leebens-Mack, James H."
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- The iPlant collaborative: cyberinfrastructure for plant biologyGoff, Stephen A.; Vaughn, Matthew; McKay, Sheldon; Lyons, Eric; Stapleton, Ann E.; Gessler, Damian; Matasci, Naim; Wang, Liya; Hanlon, Matthew; Lenards, Andrew; Muir, Andy; Merchant, Nirav; Lowry, Sonya; Mock, Stephen; Helmus, Matthew R.; Kubach, Adam; Narro, Martha; Hopkins, Nicole; Micklos, David; Hilgert, Uwe; Gonzales, Michael; Jordan, Chris; Skidmore, Edwin; Dooley, Rion; Cazes, John; McLay, Robert; Lu, Zhenyuan; Pasternak, Shiran; Koesterke, Lars; Piel, William H.; Grene, Ruth; Noutsos, Christos; Gendler, Karla; Feng, Xin; Tang, Chunlao; Lent, Monica; Kim, Seung-Jin; Kvilekval, Kristian; Manjunath, B. S.; Tannen, Val; Stamatakis, Alexandros; Sanderson, Michael; Welch, Stephen M.; Cranston, Karen A.; Soltis, Pamela S.; Soltis, Douglas E.; O'Meara, Brian; Ane, Cecile; Brutnell, Tom; Kleibenstein, Daniel J.; White, Jeffery W.; Leebens-Mack, James H.; Donoghue, Michael J.; Spalding, Edgar P.; Vision, Todd J.; Myers, Christopher R.; Lowenthal, David K.; Enquist, Brian J.; Boyle, Brad; Akoglu, Ali; Andrews, Greg; Ram, Sudha; Ware, Doreen; Stein, Lincoln; Stanzione, Dan (Frontiers, 2011)The iPlant Collaborative (iPlant) is a United States National Science Foundation (NSF) funded project that aims to create an innovative, comprehensive, and foundational cyberinfrastructure in support of plant biology research (PSCIC, 2006). iPlant is developing cyberinfrastructure that uniquely enables scientists throughout the diverse fields that comprise plant biology to address Grand Challenges in new ways, to stimulate and facilitate cross-disciplinary research, to promote biology and computer science research interactions, and to train the next generation of scientists on the use of cyberinfrastructure in research and education. Meeting humanity's projected demands for agricultural and forest products and the expectation that natural ecosystems be managed sustainably will require synergies from the application of information technologies. The iPlant cyberinfrastructure design is based on an unprecedented period of research community input, and leverages developments in high-performance computing, data storage, and cyberinfrastructure for the physical sciences. iPlant is an open-source project with application programming interfaces that allow the community to extend the infrastructure to meet its needs. iPlant is sponsoring community-driven workshops addressing specific scientific questions via analysis tool integration and hypothesis testing. These workshops teach researchers how to add bioinformatics tools and/or datasets into the iPlant cyberinfrastructure enabling plant scientists to perform complex analyses on large datasets without the need to master the command-line or high-performance computational services.
- One thousand plant transcriptomes and the phylogenomics of green plantsLeebens-Mack, James H.; Barker, Michael S.; Carpenter, Eric J.; Deyholos, Michael K.; Gitzendanner, Matthew A.; Graham, Sean W.; Grosse, Ivo; Li, Zheng; Melkonian, Michael; Mirarab, Siavash; Porsch, Martin; Quint, Marcel; Rensing, Stefan A.; Soltis, Douglas E.; Soltis, Pamela S.; Stevenson, Dennis W.; Ullrich, Kristian K.; Wickett, Norman J.; DeGironimo, Lisa; Edger, Patrick P.; Jordon-Thaden, Ingrid E.; Joya, Steve; Liu, Tao; Melkonian, Barbara; Miles, Nicholas W.; Pokorny, Lisa; Quigley, Charlotte; Thomas, Philip; Villarreal, Juan Carlos; Augustin, Megan M.; Barrett, Matthew D.; Baucom, Regina S.; Beerling, David J.; Benstein, Ruben Maximilian; Biffin, Ed; Brockington, Samuel F.; Burge, Dylan O.; Burris, Jason N.; Burris, Kellie P.; Burtet-Sarramegna, Valerie; Caicedo, Ana L.; Cannon, Steven B.; Cebi, Zehra; Chang, Ying; Chater, Caspar; Cheeseman, John M.; Chen, Tao; Clarke, Neil D.; Clayton, Harmony; Covshoff, Sarah; Crandall-Stotler, Barbara J.; Cross, Hugh; dePamphilis, Claude W.; Der, Joshua P.; Determann, Ron; Dickson, Rowan C.; Di Stilio, Veronica S.; Ellis, Shona; Fast, Eva; Feja, Nicole; Field, Katie J.; Filatov, Dmitry A.; Finnegan, Patrick M.; Floyd, Sandra K.; Fogliani, Bruno; Garcia, Nicolas; Gateble, Gildas; Godden, Grant T.; Goh, Falicia (Qi Yun); Greiner, Stephan; Harkess, Alex; Heaney, James Mike; Helliwell, Katherine E.; Heyduk, Karolina; Hibberd, Julian M.; Hodel, Richard G. J.; Hollingsworth, Peter M.; Johnson, Marc T. J.; Jost, Ricarda; Joyce, Blake; Kapralov, Maxim V.; Kazamia, Elena; Kellogg, Elizabeth A.; Koch, Marcus A.; Von Konrat, Matt; Konyves, Kalman; Kutchan, Toni M.; Lam, Vivienne; Larsson, Anders; Leitch, Andrew R.; Lentz, Roswitha; Li, Fay-Wei; Lowe, Andrew J.; Ludwig, Martha; Manos, Paul S.; Mavrodiev, Evgeny; McCormick, Melissa K.; McKain, Michael; McLellan, Tracy; McNeal, Joel R.; Miller, Richard E.; Nelson, Matthew N.; Peng, Yanhui; Ralph, Paula E.; Real, Daniel; Riggins, Chance W.; Ruhsam, Markus; Sage, Rowan F.; Sakai, Ann K.; Scascitella, Moira; Schilling, Edward E.; Schlosser, Eva-Marie; Sederoff, Heike; Servick, Stein; Sessa, Emily B.; Shaw, A. Jonathan; Shaw, Shane W.; Sigel, Erin M.; Skema, Cynthia; Smith, Alison G.; Smithson, Ann; Stewart, C. Neal, Jr.; Stinchcombe, John R.; Szovenyi, Peter; Tate, Jennifer A.; Tiebel, Helga; Trapnell, Dorset; Villegente, Matthieu; Wang, Chun-Neng; Weller, Stephen G.; Wenzel, Michael; Weststrand, Stina; Westwood, James H.; Whigham, Dennis F.; Wu, Shuangxiu; Wulff, Adrien S.; Yang, Yu; Zhu, Dan; Zhuang, Cuili; Zuidof, Jennifer; Chase, Mark W.; Pires, J. Chris; Rothfels, Carl J.; Yu, Jun; Chen, Cui; Chen, Li; Cheng, Shifeng; Li, Juanjuan; Li, Ran; Li, Xia; Lu, Haorong; Ou, Yanxiang; Sun, Xiao; Tan, Xuemei; Tang, Jingbo; Tian, Zhijian; Wang, Feng; Wang, Jun; Wei, Xiaofeng; Xu, Xun; Yan, Zhixiang; Yang, Fan; Zhong, Xiaoni; Zhou, Feiyu; Zhu, Ying; Zhang, Yong; Ayyampalayam, Saravanaraj; Barkman, Todd J.; Nam-Phuong Nguyen; Matasci, Naim; Nelson, David R.; Sayyari, Erfan; Wafula, Eric K.; Walls, Ramona L.; Warnow, Tandy; An, Hong; Arrigo, Nils; Baniaga, Anthony E.; Galuska, Sally; Jorgensen, Stacy A.; Kidder, Thomas I.; Kong, Hanghui; Lu-Irving, Patricia; Marx, Hannah E.; Qi, Xinshuai; Reardon, Chris R.; Sutherland, Brittany L.; Tiley, George P.; Welles, Shana R.; Yu, Rongpei; Zhan, Shing; Gramzow, Lydia; Theissen, Gunter; Wong, Gane Ka-Shu (2019-10-31)Green plants (Viridiplantae) include around 450,000-500,000 species(1,2) of great diversity and have important roles in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Here, as part of the One Thousand Plant Transcriptomes Initiative, we sequenced the vegetative transcriptomes of 1,124 species that span the diversity of plants in a broad sense (Archaeplastida), including green plants (Viridiplantae), glaucophytes (Glaucophyta) and red algae (Rhodophyta). Our analysis provides a robust phylogenomic framework for examining the evolution of green plants. Most inferred species relationships are well supported across multiple species tree and supermatrix analyses, but discordance among plastid and nuclear gene trees at a few important nodes highlights the complexity of plant genome evolution, including polyploidy, periods of rapid speciation, and extinction. Incomplete sorting of ancestral variation, polyploidization and massive expansions of gene families punctuate the evolutionary history of green plants. Notably, we find that large expansions of gene families preceded the origins of green plants, land plants and vascular plants, whereas whole-genome duplications are inferred to have occurred repeatedly throughout the evolution of flowering plants and ferns. The increasing availability of high-quality plant genome sequences and advances in functional genomics are enabling research on genome evolution across the green tree of life.