All Stories

  1. Resilience through diversity: The potential of modelling species and variety interactions to enhance resilience of production systems
  2. Proposed EU NGT legislation in light of plant genetic variation
  3. Unlocking the geography of Azobé timber (Lophira alata): revealing spatial genetic structure beyond species boundaries
  4. Detection and Quantification of Glandular Trichomes (Bulbous) on Potato Plant Leaf Images Using Deep Learning
  5. Intellectual property rights and plants made by new genomic techniques: Access to technology and gene-edited traits in plant breeding
  6. Genotyping of Autochthonous Rose Populations in the Netherlands for Effective Ex Situ Gene Conservation Management
  7. Prospects for evolution in European tree breeding
  8. Consumer transparency in the production chain for plant varieties produced using new genomic techniques
  9. Gene Editing of Wheat to Reduce Coeliac Disease Epitopes in Gluten
  10. Towards understanding the genome complexity of hexaploid chrysanthemum
  11. Untangling the hedge: Genetic diversity in clonally and sexually transmitted genomes of European wild roses, Rosa L.
  12. Development and applications of the Oil Palm 78K Infinium® HD SNP Array for linkage analysis and chromosome scanning
  13. A novel source of food – garden rose petals
  14. Multiallelic models for QTL mapping in diverse polyploid populations
  15. Breeding4Diversity : A research agenda for increased genetic diversity in future circular and nature-inclusive production systems
  16. Breeding Beyond Monoculture: Putting the “Intercrop” Into Crops
  17. De novo whole-genome assembly of Chrysanthemum makinoi, a key wild chrysanthemum
  18. Detecting quantitative trait loci and exploring chromosomal pairing in autopolyploids using polyqtlR
  19. The Use of Intellectual Property Systems in Plant Breeding for Ensuring Deployment of Good Agricultural Practices
  20. Advanced genebank management of genetic resources of European wild apple, Malus sylvestris, using genome-wide SNP array data
  21. Using probabilistic genotypes in linkage analysis of polyploids
  22. Analysis of allelic variants of RhMLO genes in rose and functional studies on susceptibility to powdery mildew related to clade V homologs
  23. Genome editing of polyploid crops: prospects, achievements and bottlenecks
  24. Detection of ploidy and chromosomal aberrations in commercial oil palm using high-throughput SNP markers
  25. Statement of the Prolamin Working Group on the Determination of Gluten in Fermented Foods Containing Partially Hydrolyzed Gluten
  26. Low Gluten and Coeliac-Safe Wheat Through Gene Editing
  27. Biotechnological Strategies for the Treatment of Gluten Intolerance
  28. Gluten quantity and quality in wheat and in wheat-derived products
  29. Exploring the alpha‐gliadin locus: the 33‐mer peptide with six overlapping coeliac disease epitopes in Triticum aestivum is derived from a subgroup of Aegilops tauschii
  30. Using molecular markers in breeding: ornamentals catch up
  31. CRISPR/Cas9 Gene Editing of Gluten in Wheat to Reduce Gluten Content and Exposure—Reviewing Methods to Screen for Coeliac Safety
  32. Recent Progress and Recommendations on Celiac Disease From the Working Group on Prolamin Analysis and Toxicity
  33. Genetic engineering at the heart of agroecology
  34. Optimisation of droplet digital PCR for determining copy number variation of α-gliadin genes in mutant and gene-edited polyploid bread wheat
  35. Outlook for coeliac disease patients: towards bread wheat with hypoimmunogenic gluten by gene editing of α- and γ-gliadin gene families
  36. Development of the GlutEnSeq capture system for sequencing gluten gene families in hexaploid bread wheat with deletions or mutations induced by γ-irradiation or CRISPR/Cas9
  37. In the name of the rose: a roadmap for rose research in the genome era
  38. Some thoughts on how to use markers in tetraploid rose breeding
  39. Development of Wheat With Hypoimmunogenic Gluten Obstructed by the Gene Editing Policy in Europe
  40. How to Assure That Farmers Apply New Technology According to Good Agricultural Practice: Lessons From Dutch Initiatives
  41. Satellite DNA in Paphiopedilum subgenus Parvisepalum as revealed by high-throughput sequencing and fluorescent in situ hybridization
  42. Oats in healthy gluten-free and regular diets: A perspective
  43. Food processing and breeding strategies for coeliac-safe and healthy wheat products
  44. A high-quality genome sequence of Rosa chinensis to elucidate ornamental traits
  45. polymapR—linkage analysis and genetic map construction from F1 populations of outcrossing polyploids
  46. New Developments in Molecular Techniques for Breeding in Ornamentals
  47. De Novo Assembly of Complete Chloroplast Genomes from Non-model Species Based on a K-mer Frequency-Based Selection of Chloroplast Reads from Total DNA Sequences
  48. Genome-wide association analysis for lodging tolerance and plant height in a diverse European hexaploid oat collection
  49. Partial preferential chromosome pairing is genotype dependent in tetraploid rose
  50. Re-sequencing transgenic plants revealed rearrangements at T-DNA inserts, and integration of a short T-DNA fragment, but no increase of small mutations elsewhere
  51. New traits in crops produced by genome editing techniques based on deletions
  52. Genome-Wide Association Analysis of the Anthocyanin and Carotenoid Contents of Rose Petals
  53. Why Oats Are Safe and Healthy for Celiac Disease Patients
  54. Genetic diversity and genetic structure of Persian walnut (Juglans regia) accessions from 14 European, African, and Asian countries using SSR markers
  55. High-density SNP-based genetic maps for the parents of an outcrossed and a selfed tetraploid garden rose cross, inferred from admixed progeny using the 68k rose SNP array
  56. Fine-scale spatial genetic structure in the frankincense tree Boswellia papyrifera (Del.) Hochst. and implications for conservation
  57. Population structure and genome-wide association analysis for frost tolerance in oat using continuous SNP array signal intensity ratios
  58. Opportunities for Products of New Plant Breeding Techniques
  59. Erratum to: A qRT-PCR assay for the expression of all Mal d 1 isoallergen genes
  60. Genetic diversity and differentiation of the frankincense tree (Boswellia papyrifera (Del.) Hochst) across Ethiopia and implications for its conservation
  61. New developments in green biotechnology - an inventory for RIVM
  62. Intellectual property rights and native traits in plant breeding
  63. Intellectuele eigendomsrechten en “native traits” (“natuurlijke eigenschappen”) in de plantenveredeling
  64. Profiling of Nutritional and Health-Related Compounds in Oat Varieties
  65. Effect of kilning and milling on the dough-making properties of oat flour
  66. First successful reduction of clinical allergenicity of food by genetic modification:Mal d 1-silenced apples cause fewer allergy symptoms than the wild-type cultivar
  67. Spatial sorting and range shifts: Consequences for evolutionary potential and genetic signature of a dispersal trait
  68. Using RNA-Seq to assemble a rose transcriptome with more than 13,000 full-length expressed genes and to develop the WagRhSNP 68k Axiom SNP array for rose (Rosa L.)
  69. Understanding the role of oat β-glucan in oat-based dough systems
  70. DEVELOPMENT OF THE WAGRHSNP AXIOM SNP ARRAY BASED ON SEQUENCES FROM TETRAPLOID CUT ROSES AND GARDEN ROSES
  71. Genomic sequencing and microsatellite marker development for Boswellia papyrifera, an economically important but threatened tree native to dry tropical forests
  72. TOWARDS THE ROSE GENOME SEQUENCE AND ITS USE IN RESEARCH AND BREEDING
  73. Landscape diversity enhances the resilience of populations, ecosystems and local economy in rural areas
  74. Genetically modified crops and sustainable agriculture: A proposed way forward in the societal debate
  75. Using multi-locus allelic sequence data to estimate genetic divergence among four Lilium (Liliaceae) cultivars
  76. Efficient development of highly polymorphic microsatellite markers based on polymorphic repeats in transcriptome sequences of multiple individuals
  77. Abiotic stress QTL in lettuce crop–wild hybrids: comparing greenhouse and field experiments
  78. Reducing the incidence of allergy and intolerance to cereals
  79. The domestication and evolutionary ecology of apples
  80. Development of a standard test for dough-making properties of oat cultivars
  81. New insights into domestication of carrot from root transcriptome analyses
  82. Insight into the Genetic Components of Community Genetics: QTL Mapping of Insect Association in a Fast-Growing Forest Tree
  83. Genetic diversity and differentiation in roses: A garden rose perspective
  84. Avenin diversity analysis of the genus Avena (oat). Relevance for people with celiac disease
  85. AFLP-based population structure analysis as a means to validate the complex taxonomy of dogroses (Rosa section Caninae)
  86. Community genetics in the time of next-generation molecular technologies
  87. A qRT-PCR assay for the expression of all Mal d 1 isoallergen genes
  88. Postglacial recolonization history of the European crabapple (Malus sylvestrisMill.), a wild contributor to the domesticated apple
  89. Genomic and environmental selection patterns in two distinct lettuce crop–wild hybrid crosses
  90. Quantitative and qualitative differences in celiac disease epitopes among durum wheat varieties identified through deep RNA-amplicon sequencing
  91. The diploid origins of allopolyploid rose species studied using single nucleotide polymorphism haplotypes flanking a microsatellite repeat
  92. Phylogenetics of Stelis and closely related genera (Orchidaceae: Pleurothallidinae)
  93. Efficient distinction of invasive aquatic plant species from non-invasive related species using DNA barcoding
  94. HIGH THROUGHPUT MARKER DEVELOPMENT AND APPLICATION IN HORTICULTURAL CROPS
  95. Correction: A Universal Approach to Eliminate Antigenic Properties of Alpha-Gliadin Peptides in Celiac Disease
  96. SNP GENOTYPING IN TETRAPLOID CUT ROSES
  97. Analysis of average standardized SSR allele size supports domestication of soybean along the Yellow River
  98. Hybridization between crops and wild relatives: the contribution of cultivated lettuce to the vigour of crop–wild hybrids under drought, salinity and nutrient deficiency conditions
  99. Wrong place, wrong time: climate change-induced range shift across fragmented habitat causes maladaptation and declined population size in a modelled bird species
  100. New Insight into the History of Domesticated Apple: Secondary Contribution of the European Wild Apple to the Genome of Cultivated Varieties
  101. Botanical DNA evidence in criminal cases: Knotgrass (Polygonum aviculare L.) as a model species
  102. A Bayesian analysis of gene flow from crops to their wild relatives: cultivated (Lactuca sativaL.) and prickly lettuce (L. serriolaL.) and the recent expansion ofL. serriolain Europe
  103. The mode of inheritance in tetraploid cut roses
  104. Genomic regions in crop-wild hybrids of lettuce are affected differently in different environments: implications for crop breeding
  105. Expansion of the gamma-gliadin gene family in Aegilops and Triticum
  106. Celiac disease T-cell epitopes from gamma-gliadins: immunoreactivity depends on the genome of origin, transcript frequency, and flanking protein variation
  107. Crop to wild introgression in lettuce: following the fate of crop genome segments in backcross populations
  108. Acceptance of Natural and Genetically Modified Hypoallergenic Apples by Consumers with an Oral Allergy Syndrome (OAS)
  109. In Search of Hypoallergenic Birch Trees: Characterization of PR-10 Genes from Eight Betula Species and Detection of Bet v 1 Isoforms in Birch Pollen Using a Combined Genomics- Proteomics Approach
  110. Landscape prerequisites for the survival of a modelled metapopulation and its neutral genetic diversity are affected by climate change
  111. Proteomic analysis of the major birch allergen Bet v 1 predicts allergenicity for 15 birch species
  112. Natural variation in avenin epitopes among oat varieties: Implications for celiac disease
  113. Genetic diversity and association mapping in a collection of selected Chinese soybean accessions based on SSR marker analysis
  114. Projected climate change causes loss and redistribution of genetic diversity in a model metapopulation of a medium-good disperser
  115. Dough quality of bread wheat lacking α-gliadins with celiac disease epitopes and addition of celiac-safe avenins to improve dough quality
  116. What's in a name; Genetic structure in Solanum section Petota studied using population-genetic tools
  117. Consumer attitudes towards hypoallergenic apples that alleviate mild apple allergy
  118. Rosa
  119. A Universal Approach to Eliminate Antigenic Properties of Alpha-Gliadin Peptides in Celiac Disease
  120. Permanent Genetic Resources added to Molecular Ecology Resources Database 1 August 2010 - 30 September 2010
  121. Analysis of SSRs Uncovers Hierarchical Structure and Genetic Diversity in Chinese Soybean Landraces
  122. Towards a unified genetic map for diploid roses
  123. Epigenetics in plant tissue culture
  124. Mass spectrometry and pollen allergies
  125. Presence of celiac disease epitopes in modern and old hexaploid wheat varieties: wheat breeding may have contributed to increased prevalence of celiac disease
  126. Characterisation of sugar beet (Beta vulgaris L. ssp. vulgaris) varieties using microsatellite markers
  127. Isolation and characterization of six microsatellite loci in the larch budmoth Zeiraphera diniana (Lepidoptera: Tortricidae)
  128. In search of tetraploid wheat accessions reduced in celiac disease-related gluten epitopes
  129. Genetic diversity and genetic similarities between Iranian rose species
  130. Impact of Urbanization on the Proteome of Birch Pollen and Its Chemotactic Activity on Human Granulocytes
  131. Patterns of habitat occupancy, genetic variation and predicted movement of a flightless bush cricket, Pholidoptera griseoaptera, in an agricultural mosaic landscape
  132. IN SEARCH OF GENETIC DIVERSITY IN ROSA FOETIDA HERRMANN IN IRAN
  133. Darwin's wind hypothesis: does it work for plant dispersal in fragmented habitats?
  134. ANALYSIS OF A DATABASE OF DNA PROFILES OF 734 HYBRID TEA ROSE VARIETIES
  135. Landscape genetics of fragmented forests: anticipating climate change by facilitating migration
  136. DNA barcoding discriminates the noxious invasive plant species, floating pennywort (Hydrocotyle ranunculoidesL.f.), from non-invasive relatives
  137. Pollen-mediated gene flow in maize tested for coexistence of GM and non-GM crops in the Netherlands: effect of isolation distances between fields
  138. Autosomal and sex-linked microsatellite loci in the green oak leaf rollerTortrix viridanaL. (Lepidoptera, Tortricidae)
  139. A modified extraction protocol enables detection and quantification of celiac disease-related gluten proteins from wheat
  140. Development of SNP markers and haplotype analysis of the candidate gene for rhg1, which confers resistance to soybean cyst nematode in soybean
  141. Tetraploid and hexaploid wheat varieties reveal large differences in expression of alpha-gliadins from homoeologous Gli-2 loci
  142. Effects of landscape structure on genetic diversity of Geum urbanum L. populations in agricultural landscapes
  143. Characterization of PR-10 genes from eight Betula species and detection of Bet v 1 isoforms in birch pollen
  144. Removing celiac disease-related gluten proteins from bread wheat while retaining technological properties: a study with Chinese Spring deletion lines
  145. The origin and early development of wheat glutenin particles
  146. Detailed Analysis of the Expression of an Alpha-gliadin Promoter and the Deposition of Alpha-gliadin Protein During Wheat Grain Development
  147. Phylogenetic relationships in Betula (Betulaceae) based on AFLP markers
  148. Genetic structure and diversity of cultivated soybean (Glycine max (L.) Merr.) landraces in China
  149. The influence of perceived benefits on acceptance of GM applications for allergy prevention
  150. Staining efficiency of specific proteins depends on the staining method: Wheat gluten proteins
  151. Structure of the genetic diversity in black poplar (Populus nigra L.) populations across European river systems: Consequences for conservation and restoration
  152. Prediction uncertainty of environmental change effects on temperate European biodiversity
  153. AFLP markers as a tool to reconstruct complex relationships: A case study in Rosa (Rosaceae)
  154. Natural hybridisation between Populus nigra L. and P. x canadensis Moench. Hybrid offspring competes for niches along the Rhine river in the Netherlands
  155. Plant functional group composition and large‐scale species richness in European agricultural landscapes
  156. Beyond coeliac disease toxicity - towards wheat that is safe for celiac disease patients.
  157. Development of microsatellite markers in Gonystylus bancanus (Ramin) useful for tracing and tracking of wood of this protected species
  158. Genetic population differentiation and connectivity among fragmented Moor frog (Rana arvalis) populations in The Netherlands
  159. Indicators for biodiversity in agricultural landscapes: a pan-European study
  160. THE DIVERSITY OF AUTOCHTHONOUS ROSES IN FLANDERS (BELGIUM) IN THE VIEW OF THE EUROPEAN GENEROSE REFERENCE FRAMEWORK
  161. Microsatellite analysis of Damask rose (Rosa damascena Mill.) accessions from various regions in Iran reveals multiple genotypes
  162. Assignment Tests for Variety Identification Compared to Genetic Similarity-Based Methods Using Experimental Datasets from Different Marker Systems in Sugar Beet
  163. Plant translational genomics: from model species to crops
  164. Linked vs. unlinked markers: multilocus microsatellite haplotype-sharing as a tool to estimate gene flow and introgression
  165. QTL identification for early blight resistance (Alternaria solani) in a Solanum lycopersicum × S. arcanum cross
  166. Isolation and characterization of trinucleotide repeat microsatellite markers for Plutella xylostella L.
  167. Regional gene flow and population structure of the wind-dispersed plant species Hypochaeris radicata (Asteraceae) in an agricultural landscape
  168. Characterization of oil palm MADS box genes in relation to the mantled flower abnormality
  169. Microsatellite variation and population structure of a recovering Tree frog (Hyla arborea L.) metapopulation
  170. Diversity and food quality properties of farmers' varieties of sorghum from Bénin
  171. Strategies for prevention and mitigation of hay fever
  172. Identifying, managing and monitoring conflicts between forest biodiversity conservation and other human interests in Europe
  173. Natural Variation in Toxicity of Wheat: Potential for Selection of Nontoxic Varieties for Celiac Disease Patients
  174. GENEROSE: GENETIC EVALUATION OF EUROPEAN ROSE RESOURCES FOR CONSERVATION AND HORTICULTURAL USE
  175. Clonal diversity and genetic differentiation of Maianthemum bifolium among forest fragments of different age
  176. Genetic Structure in Populations of an Ancient Woodland Sedge, Carex sylvatica Hudson, at a Regional and Local Scale
  177. Isolation and characterization of microsatellite loci in the dark bush cricket, Pholidoptera griseoaptera (Tettigoniidae)
  178. Postglacial migration of Populus nigra L.: lessons learnt from chloroplast DNA
  179. Isolation and characterization of highly polymorphic microsatellite markers in Hypochaeris radicata (Asteraceae)
  180. The establishment of ‘essential derivation’ among rose varieties, using AFLP
  181. Isolation and characterization of microsatellite loci in Geum urbanum (Rosaceae) and their transferability within the genus Geum
  182. Genetic differentiation and trade among populations of peach palm ( Bactris gasipaes Kunth) in the Peruvian Amazon?implications for genetic resource management
  183. Past and current gene flow in the selfing, wind-dispersed species Mycelis muralis in western Europe
  184. Efficient targeting of plant disease resistance loci using NBS profiling
  185. Ex-situ conservation of Black poplar in Europe: genetic diversity in nine gene bank collections and their value for nature development
  186. Genetic variation in the endangered wild apple (Malus sylvestris (L.) Mill.) in Belgium as revealed by amplified fragment length polymorphism and microsatellite markers
  187. Characterization of microsatellite markers inFagus sylvaticaL. andFagus orientalisLipsky
  188. Identification of cut rose (Rosa hybrida) and rootstock varieties using robust sequence tagged microsatellite site markers
  189. Microsatellite genotyping of carnation varieties
  190. Dinucleotide repeat microsatellite markers for buck's-horn plantain (Plantago coronopus)
  191. Cloning and characterization of four apple MADS box genes isolated from vegetative tissue
  192. Use of microsatellites to evaluate genetic diversity and species relationships in the genus Lycopersicon
  193. Trinucleotide repeat microsatellite markers for black poplar (Populus nigra L.)
  194. Genetic similarity as a measure for connectivity between fragmented populations of the moor frog (Rana arvalis)
  195. Microsatellite markers for the European tree frogHyla arborea
  196. Development and characterization of microsatellite markers in black poplar ( Populus nigra L.)
  197. Genetic Diversity and the Survival of Populations
  198. Genetic Diversity and the Reintroduction of Meadow Species
  199. Microsatellite markers useful throughout the genus Dianthus
  200. Microsatellite markers useful throughout the genus Dianthus
  201. Dispersal patterns of Lonicera periclymenum determined by genetic analysis
  202. Use of short microsatellites from database sequences to generate polymorphisms among Lycopersicon esculentum cultivars and accessions of other Lycopersicon species
  203. Competence for Regeneration during Tobacco Internodal Development (Involvement of Plant Age, Cell Elongation Stage, and Degree of Polysomaty)
  204. Tissue culture-induced DNA methylation polymorphisms in repetitive DNA of tomato calli and regenerated plants
  205. IDENTIFICATION OF TOMATO CULTIVARS USING MICROSATELLITES
  206. Natural variation in patterns of polysomaty among individual tomato plants and their regenerated progeny
  207. Direct comparison of levels of genetic variation in tomato detected by a GACA-containing microsatellite probe and by random amplified polymorphic DNA
  208. The competence of cells for cell division and regeneration in tobacco explants depends on cellular location, cell cycle phase and ploidy level
  209. Development of polysomaty during differentiation in diploid and tetraploid tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum) plants
  210. Book Reviews
  211. Identification of highly polymorphic DNA regions in tomato
  212. Inhibition by Ethylene of Auxin-Promotion of Flower Bud Formation in Tobacco Explants Is Absent in Plants Transformed by Agrobacterium rhizogenes
  213. Ethylene Promotes Elongation Growth and Auxin Promotes Radial Growth in Ranunculus sceleratus Petioles
  214. Metabolism of 1-naphthaleneacetic acid in explants of tobacco: Evidence for release of free hormone from conjugates
  215. The dose of 1-naphthaleneacetic acid determines flower-bud regeneration in tobacco explants at a large range of concentrations
  216. BASIC PEROXIDASES AND ROOTING IN MICROCUTTINGS OF MALUS
  217. Cytokinins and Flower Bud Formation in Vitro in Tobacco: Role of the Metabolites
  218. Effects of the Developmental State of the Tissue on the Competence for Flower Bud Regeneration in Pedicel Explants of Tobacco
  219. The dose of 1-naphthaleneacetic acid determines flower-bud regeneration in tobacco expiants at a large range of concentrations
  220. Role of ethylene in auxin-induced flower bud formation in tobacco explants
  221. Role of ethylene in auxin-induced flower bud formation in tobacco explants
  222. Polar Transport of 1-Naphthaleneacetic Acid Determines the Distribution of Flower Buds on Explants of Tobacco
  223. Auxin Regulation of Flower Bud Formation in Tobacco Explants
  224. Protein Synthesis in Embryos of Dormant and Germinating Agrostemma githago L. seeds