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No Time To Read

By: Arif Ashraf
  • Summary

  • Arif, plant biologist and host of the podcast, will talk to lead author of a recently published plant biology paper. The guest will simply explain the story of the publication, answer questions from the host, and share personal experience and details related to the article. As an audience, you will tune in to the episode with an expectation that you will know the story of the paper without reading it. Besides, you can keep listening the podcast during your experiment, walking outside, in your car and wherever possible.
    Arif Ashraf
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Episodes
  • S3E1 | Ryan Nett | Plant carbonic anhydrase-like enzymes in neuroactive alkaloid biosynthesis
    May 4 2024

    No Time To Read podcast

    S3E1

    Plant carbonic anhydrase-like enzymes in neuroactive alkaloid biosynthesis


    Guest: Ryan Nett, Assistant Professor, Department of Molecular and cellular Biology, Harvard University

    Twitter/X: @rnett42


    Host: Arif Ashraf, Assistant Professor, Department of Biology, Howard University

    Twitter/X: @aribidopsis

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    23 mins
  • Season 3 is coming soon
    Feb 28 2024

    Season 3 of the No Time To Read podcast is starting soon. Thanks for your support as an audience.

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    2 mins
  • S2E9 | Sunil Kenchanmane Raju | DNA methylation and Gene duplication
    Jul 16 2023

    Article: DNA methylation signatures of duplicate gene evolution in angiosperms

    Journal: Plant Physiology

    Year: 2023

    Guest: Sunil Kenchanmane Raju

    Host: Arif Ashraf


    Abstract


    Gene duplication is a source of evolutionary novelty. DNA methylation may play a role in the evolution of duplicate genes (paralogs) through its association with gene expression. While this relationship has been examined to varying extents in a few individual species, the generalizability of these results at either a broad phylogenetic scale with species of differing duplication histories or across a population remains unknown. We applied a comparative epigenomic approach to 43 angiosperm species across the phylogeny and a population of 928 Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana) accessions, examining the association of DNA methylation with paralog evolution. Genic DNA methylation was differentially associated with duplication type, the age of duplication, sequence evolution, and gene expression. Whole-genome duplicates were typically enriched for CG-only gene body methylated or unmethylated genes, while single-gene duplications were typically enriched for non-CG methylated or unmethylated genes. Non-CG methylation, in particular, was a characteristic of more recent single-gene duplicates. Core angiosperm gene families were differentiated into those which preferentially retain paralogs and “duplication-resistant” families, which convergently reverted to singletons following duplication. Duplication-resistant families that still have paralogous copies were, uncharacteristically for core angiosperm genes, enriched for non-CG methylation. Non-CG methylated paralogs had higher rates of sequence evolution, higher frequency of presence–absence variation, and more limited expression. This suggests that silencing by non-CG methylation may be important to maintaining dosage following duplication and be a precursor to fractionation. Our results indicate that genic methylation marks differing evolutionary trajectories and fates between paralogous genes and have a role in maintaining dosage following duplication.


    Cover art design and audio editing: Ragib Anjum

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    32 mins

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