Abstract

A report on the Cold Spring Harbor Asia conference on Genome Assisted Biology of Crops and Model Plant Systems Meeting, held in Suzhou, China, April 21–25, 2014.

Highlights

  • A report on the Cold Spring Harbor Asia conference on Genome Assisted Biology of Crops and Model Plant Systems Meeting, held in Suzhou, China, April 21–25, 2014

  • Technologies to explore genetic elements and their networks to control plant phenotypes, ways to integrate multiple types of -omics data and genetics data, moving from model plants to crops, and challenges to the quantitative modeling of complex traits

  • Single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers identified from resequencing are generally tested for their association with traits of agricultural importance, such as plant growth and development, and metabolites are often crucial for such traits

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Summary

Introduction

A report on the Cold Spring Harbor Asia conference on Genome Assisted Biology of Crops and Model Plant Systems Meeting, held in Suzhou, China, April 21–25, 2014. Technologies to explore genetic elements and their networks to control plant phenotypes, ways to integrate multiple types of -omics data and genetics data, moving from model plants to crops, and challenges to the quantitative modeling of complex traits. Meeting report Plant genomes are generally much larger and more complex than those of animals, encoding molecular circuits of high sophistication and robustness to control physiology.

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