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Ali Mohammad Banaei-Moghaddam
Researcher at University of Tehran
Publications - 25
Citations - 923
Ali Mohammad Banaei-Moghaddam is an academic researcher from University of Tehran. The author has contributed to research in topics: B chromosome & Gene. The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 20 publications receiving 802 citations. Previous affiliations of Ali Mohammad Banaei-Moghaddam include Leibniz Association.
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Selfish supernumerary chromosome reveals its origin as a mosaic of host genome and organellar sequences
Mihaela Martis,Sonja Klemme,Ali Mohammad Banaei-Moghaddam,Frank R. Blattner,Jiří Macas,Thomas Schmutzer,Uwe Scholz,Heidrun Gundlach,Thomas Wicker,Hana Šimková,Petr Novák,Pavel Neumann,Marie Kubaláková,Eva Bauer,Grit Haseneyer,Jörg Fuchs,Jaroslav Doležel,Nils Stein,Klaus F. X. Mayer,Andreas Houben +19 more
TL;DR: It is shown that B chromosomes of rye are rich in gene-derived sequences, allowing us to trace their origin to fragments of A chromosomes, with the largest parts corresponding to rye chromosomes 3R and 7R, and a comprehensive model of B chromosome evolution is proposed.
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Evolution and biology of supernumerary B chromosomes.
TL;DR: This work summarizes the latest findings on supernumerary chromosomes with a special focus on the origin, DNA composition, and the non-Mendelian accumulation mechanism of Bs.
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Point mutation impairs centromeric CENH3 loading and induces haploid plants
Raheleh Karimi-Ashtiyani,Takayoshi Ishii,Markus Niessen,Nils Stein,Stefan Heckmann,Maia Gurushidze,Ali Mohammad Banaei-Moghaddam,Jörg Fuchs,Veit Schubert,Kerstin Koch,Oda Weiss,Dmitri Demidov,Klaus M. Schmidt,Jochen Kumlehn,Andreas Houben +14 more
TL;DR: It is shown that a single-point amino acid exchange in the centromere-targeting domain of CENH3 leads to reduced centRomere loading of C ENH3 in barley, sugar beet, and Arabidopsis thaliana.
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Formation and Expression of Pseudogenes on the B Chromosome of Rye
TL;DR: This work demonstrates that the B chromosome of rye contributes to the transcriptome and also affects in trans the activity of standard A chromosome–located genes, and proposes a model for the evolution of B chromosome-located pseudogenes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Genes on B chromosomes: old questions revisited with new tools.
Ali Mohammad Banaei-Moghaddam,Mihaela Martis,Jiří Macas,Heidrun Gundlach,Axel Himmelbach,Lothar Altschmied,Klaus F. X. Mayer,Andreas Houben +7 more
TL;DR: Recent data suggest that B chromosomes carry transcriptionally active genic sequences which could affect the transcriptome profile of their host genome and this makes B chromosome a nice model for studying regulatory mechanisms of duplicated genes and their evolutionary consequences.