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báo cáo khoa học: " A newly-developed community microarray resource for transcriptome profiling in Brassica species enables the confirmation of Brassica-specific expressed sequences"

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Tuyển tập báo cáo các nghiên cứu khoa học quốc tế ngành y học dành cho các bạn tham khảo đề tài: A newly-developed community microarray resource for transcriptome profiling in Brassica species enables the confirmation of Brassica-specific expressed sequences | BMC Plant Biology BioMed Central Research article Open Access A newly-developed community microarray resource for transcriptome profiling in Brassica species enables the confirmation of Brassica-specific expressed sequences Martin Trick1 Foo Cheung2 Nizar Drou1 Fiona Fraser1 Edward K Lobenhofer3 4 Patrick Hurban3 Andreas Magusin1 Christopher D Town2 and Ian Bancroft 1 Address 1John Innes Centre Norwich Research Park Colney Norwich NR4 7UH UK 2The J Craig Venter Institute 9704 Medical Center Drive Rockville MD 20850 USA 3Cogenics A Division of Clinical Data Inc 100 Perimeter Park Drive Suite C Morrisville NC 27560 USA and 4Current address Amgen Inc 1 Amgen Center Drive Thousand Oaks CA 91320 USA Email Martin Trick - martin.trick@bbsrc.ac.uk Foo Cheung - FCheung@jcvi.org Nizar Drou - nizar.drou@bbsrc.ac.uk Fiona Fraser - fiona.fraser@bbsrc.ac.uk Edward K Lobenhofer - elobenhofer@cogenics.com Patrick Hurban - phurban@cogenics.com Andreas Magusin - andreas.magusin@bbsrc.ac.uk Christopher D Town - cdtown@jcvi.org Ian Bancroft - ian.bancroft@bbsrc.ac.uk Corresponding author Published 8 May 2009 Received 31 October 2008 BMC Plant Biology 2009 9 50 doi l0.ll86 l47l-2229-9-50 Accepted 8 May 2009 This article is available from http www.biomedcentral.cOm l47l-2229 9 50 2009 Trick et al licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http creativecommons.org licenses by 2.0 which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract Background The Brassica species include an important group of crops and provide opportunities for studying the evolutionary consequences of polyploidy. They are related to Arabidopsis thaliana for which the first complete plant genome sequence was obtained and their genomes show extensive although imperfect conserved synteny with that of A. thaliana. A large number of EST sequences derived from a

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