Skip to main content
GrainGenes

GrainGenes

A Database for Triticeae and Avena

Main menu

  • Home
  • GrainGenes Tools
    • Browse GrainGenes
    • GSP: Genome Specific Primers
    • RJPrimers (offline)
    • BatchPrimer3 (offline)
    • PIECE2 (offline)
    • BLAST
    • SNPWorld (obsolete)
    • CMap
    • Genome Browsers
    • PanGenomes
  • Query Data Types
    • Genetic Markers
    • Sequences
    • Colleagues
    • Gene Expression
    • Maps
  • Resources
    • GrainGenes Tutorials
    • Genomics
    • Germplasm
    • Mapping
    • Pathology
    • Protocols
    • Publications
    • Taxonomy
    • Links to Related Sites
  • Collaborations
    • AgBioData
    • Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC)
    • Oat Global
    • The Triticeae Toolbox
    • USDA-ARS Small Grains Genotyping Labs
    • U.S. Wheat and Barley Scab Initiative
    • WheatExp
    • WheatIS
  • About
  • Feedback
  • Cite Us!


Query (optional)   in Class  

GrainGenes Keyword Report: rdna units

[Submit comment/correction]

Keyword
rdna units
Quoted in
ReferenceBaum BR and Bailey LG (2004) The origin of the A genome donor of wheats (Triticum : Poaceae) - a perspective based on the sequence variation of the 5S DNA gene units Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 51:183-196.
ReferenceBaum BR and Bailey LG (2001) The 5S rRNA gene sequence variation in wheats and some polyploid wheat progenitors (Poaceae : Triticeae) Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution 48:35-51.
ReferenceVan Campenhout S et al. (2001) The specific isolation of complete 5S rDNA units from chromosome 1A of hexaploid, tetraploid, and diploid wheat species using PCR with head-to-head oriented primers Genome 44:529-538.
ReferenceBaum BR et al. (2001) Defining orthologous groups among multicopy genes prior to inferring phylogeny, with special emphasis on the Triticeae (Poaceae) Hereditas 135:123-138.
ReferenceBaum BR and Johnson DA (2000) The 5S rRNA gene units in the native New World annual Hordeum species (Triticeae : Poaceae) Canadian Journal of Botany 78:1590-1602.

GrainGenes is a product of the Agricultural Research Service of the US Department of Agriculture.