Fig. S1 Schematic diagram of qPCR genotyping primer positions. EjPSY2A and EjPSY2Ad are a pair of alleles in loquat. They control the color formation of loquat flesh. EjPSY2A is the dominant gene of red flesh (denoted as A), EjPSY2Ad is the recessive gene of white flesh (denoted as a). Red-fleshed genotype is AA or Aa, white-fleshed genotype is aa.Partial deletion of EjPSY2Ad in white-fleshed loquat results in functional defects relative to red-fleshed loquat According to the sequence of EjPSY2A and EjPSY2Ad, design allele A specific primer q2A, allele A and a specific primer q2A/2Ad.
EjPSY2A and EjPSY2Ad are a pair of alleles in loquat
Volltext
ÄHNLICHE DOKUMENTE
While a S103A substitution does not change the BicD A40V phenotype, the permanent phospho-mimic mutant S103D fully inactivates the protein, and a S103F mutant restores its
describes an organizational scheme for interaction design patterns to support the process of implementing a complete pattern language covering all the different levels of the solution
Käesolevas töös uuritakse eeliseid ja probleeme, mis sülearvuti igapäevase kasutamisega õppetöös kaasnevad, seda nii uurimuses osalenud õpilaste kui õpetajate poolt
Hybrid identification, ploidy identification and flesh color-specific marker identification in the F 1 hybrids The F 1 hybrids were identified by hybrid identification,
q2A/2Ad is the specific primer of EjPSY2A and EjPSY2A d , q2A is the specific primer of EjPSY2A, Ch03g12 is the reference sequence.. The genotype of tetraploid loquat B432
Aseev S.M., Hutschenreiter G., Kryazhimskii A.V., 2002, A Dynamical Model of Optimal Allocation of Resources to R&D, International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis,
We next combined ChaGAL80 with each APL-expressing GAL4 driver and the uas-shi ts1 transgene to test whether APL expression was necessary for the observed memory phenotypes when
Each species’ cumulative current map generated using population data displays an overview of areas where functional connectivity among breeding populations is high (Figure 3a;