Nina Reis Soares

ORCID: 0000-0003-4106-007X
Publications
Citations
Views
---
Saved
---
About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Sugarcane Cultivation and Processing
  • Biofuel production and bioconversion
  • Plant Pathogenic Bacteria Studies
  • Rice Cultivation and Yield Improvement
  • Plant and animal studies
  • Banana Cultivation and Research
  • Plant Parasitism and Resistance
  • Cocoa and Sweet Potato Agronomy
  • Agricultural and Food Sciences
  • Healthcare Regulation
  • Plant Disease Resistance and Genetics
  • Plant Reproductive Biology
  • Piperaceae Chemical and Biological Studies
  • Plant tissue culture and regeneration
  • Chromosomal and Genetic Variations

Universidade de São Paulo
2021-2024

Universidade Federal de Lavras
2021

Abstract The modern cultivars of sugarcane ( Saccharum spp.) are highly polyploid and accumulate aneuploidies due to their history domestication, genetic improvement interspecific hybrid origin involving the domesticated sweet species officinarum (‘noble cane’) wild spontaneum , both with an evolutionary polyploidy. first hybrids were backcrossed S. selection from progenies in subsequent generations established basis cultivars. genome complexity has inspired several molecular studies that...

10.1111/aab.12855 article EN Annals of Applied Biology 2023-07-12

SUMMARY The sugarcane ( Saccharum spp.) genome is one of the most complex all. Modern varieties are highly polyploid and aneuploid as a result hybridization between officinarum S. spontaneum . Little research has been done on meiotic control in species, with exception wheat Ph1 locus harboring ZIP4 gene TaZIP4 ‐B2) which promotes pairing homologous chromosomes while suppressing crossover homeologs. In sugarcane, despite its interspecific origin, bivalent association favored, multivalents, if...

10.1111/tpj.16731 article EN The Plant Journal 2024-03-25

Abstract The modern cultivars of sugarcane ( Saccharum spp.) are highly polyploid and accumulate aneuploidies due to their history domestication, genetic improvement interspecific hybrid origin involving the domesticated sweet species S. officinarum ('noble cane') wild spontaneum , both with an evolutionary polyploidy. first hybrids were backcrossed selection from progenies in subsequent generations established basis cultivars. genome complexity has inspired several molecular studies that...

10.21203/rs.3.rs-2216232/v1 preprint EN cc-by Research Square (Research Square) 2022-10-31
Coming Soon ...