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Mathieu Charles

Researcher at Institut national de la recherche agronomique

Publications -  10
Citations -  3889

Mathieu Charles is an academic researcher from Institut national de la recherche agronomique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Genome & Triticeae. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 10 publications receiving 3315 citations. Previous affiliations of Mathieu Charles include Centre national de la recherche scientifique.

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Early allopolyploid evolution in the post-Neolithic Brassica napus oilseed genome

Boulos Chalhoub, +86 more
- 22 Aug 2014 - 
TL;DR: The polyploid genome of Brassica napus, which originated from a recent combination of two distinct genomes approximately 7500 years ago and gave rise to the crops of rape oilseed, is sequenced.
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Genome sequencing and analysis of the model grass Brachypodium distachyon

John P. Vogel, +136 more
- 11 Feb 2010 - 
TL;DR: The high-quality genome sequence will help Brachypodium reach its potential as an important model system for developing new energy and food crops and establishes a template for analysis of the large genomes of economically important pooid grasses such as wheat.
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Duplication and partitioning in evolution and function of homoeologous Q loci governing domestication characters in polyploid wheat.

TL;DR: Combined phenotypic and expression analysis indicated that, whereas 5AQ plays a major role in conferring domestication-related traits, 5Dq contributes directly and 5Bq indirectly to suppression of the speltoid phenotype, all contributing to the domestication traits.
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Dynamics and Differential Proliferation of Transposable Elements During the Evolution of the B and A Genomes of Wheat

TL;DR: The majority of differential proliferation of TEs in B and A genomes of wheat, leading to rapid sequence divergence, occurred prior to the allotetraploidization event that brought them together in Triticum turgidum andTriticum aestivum, <0.5 million years ago.
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Types and Rates of Sequence Evolution at the High-Molecular-Weight Glutenin Locus in Hexaploid Wheat and Its Ancestral Genomes

TL;DR: Analysis of the indel frequency and the rate of nucleotide substitution demonstrated that the two A genomes are significantly more divergent than the two B genomes, further supporting the hypothesis that hexaploid wheat may have more than one tetraploid ancestor.