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List of model organisms

This is a list of model organisms used in scientific research.

Viruses

Phages (infecting prokaryotes):

Animal viruses:

Plant viruses:

Bacteria

Bacteria with minimal synthetic genomes

Bacteria with synthetic, minimized genomes provide a near-"blank slate" for study. Foreign genes, natural or artificial, can be introduced into these minimal bacteria to study their function as well as what is needed for their function.

Archaea

Eukaryotes

Protists

Fungi

Plants

Vascular plants

  • Lemna gibba, rapidly growing aquatic monocot, one of the smallest flowering plants. Lemna growth assays are used to evaluate the toxicity of chemicals to plants in ecotoxicology. Because it can be grown in pure culture, microbial action can be excluded. Lemna is being used as a recombinant expression system for economical production of complex biopharmaceuticals. It is also used in education to demonstrate population growth curves.
  • Zea mays L. (Maize/corn), cereal grain. It is a diploid monocot with 10 large chromosome pairs, easily studied with the microscope. Its genetic features, including many known and mapped phenotypic mutants and a large number of progeny per cross (typically 100–200) facilitated the discovery of transposons ("jumping genes"). Many DNA markers have been mapped and the genome has been sequenced. (Genetics, Molecular biology, Agronomy)
  • Medicago truncatula, model legume, closely related to the common alfalfa. Its rather small genome is currently being sequenced. It is used to study the symbiosis responsible for nitrogen fixation. (Agronomy, Molecular biology)
  • Mimulus guttatus, model organism used in evolutionary and functional genomes studies. The genus Mimulus contains c. 120 species and is in the family Phrymaceae. Several genetic resources have been designed for the study of this genus and some are free access (http://www.mimulusevolution.org)
  • Nicotiana benthamiana, model organism for plant-pathogen studies.
  • Nicotiana tabacum cv. BY-2 (Tobacco BY-2 cells), suspension cell line from tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) that is useful for general plant physiology studies at the cell level. The genome of this particular cultivar will not be sequenced in the near future, but sequencing of its wild species Nicotiana tabacum is presently in progress. (Cytology, Plant physiology, Biotechnology)
  • Oryza sativa (Rice) is used as a model for cereal biology. It has one of the smallest genomes of any cereal species, and sequencing of its genome is finished. (Agronomy, Molecular biology)
  • Populus, genus used as a model in forest genetics and woody plant studies. It has a small genome size, grows very rapidly, and is easily transformed. The genome sequence of black cottonwood (Populus trichocarpa) is publicly available.

Other Archaeplastida

Animals

Invertebrates

Vertebrates

References