Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.

BACKGROUND: Distinguishing between individuals is critical to those conducting animal/plant breeding, food safety/quality research, diagnostic and clinical testing, and evolutionary biology studies. Classical genetic identification studies are based on marker polymorphisms, but polymorphism-based te...

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Main Authors: Philippe Chouvarine, Amanda M Cooksey, Fiona M McCarthy, David A Ray, Brian S Baldwin, Shane C Burgess, Daniel G Peterson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254643?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-daeb4d79e3b14756a92b3b81490bccc92020-11-25T02:31:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0171e2985010.1371/journal.pone.0029850Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.Philippe ChouvarineAmanda M CookseyFiona M McCarthyDavid A RayBrian S BaldwinShane C BurgessDaniel G PetersonBACKGROUND: Distinguishing between individuals is critical to those conducting animal/plant breeding, food safety/quality research, diagnostic and clinical testing, and evolutionary biology studies. Classical genetic identification studies are based on marker polymorphisms, but polymorphism-based techniques are time and labor intensive and often cannot distinguish between closely related individuals. Illumina sequencing technologies provide the detailed sequence data required for rapid and efficient differentiation of related species, lines/cultivars, and individuals in a cost-effective manner. Here we describe the use of Illumina high-throughput exome sequencing, coupled with SNP mapping, as a rapid means of distinguishing between related cultivars of the lignocellulosic bioenergy crop giant miscanthus (Miscanthus × giganteus). We provide the first exome sequence database for Miscanthus species complete with Gene Ontology (GO) functional annotations. RESULTS: A SNP comparative analysis of rhizome-derived cDNA sequences was successfully utilized to distinguish three Miscanthus × giganteus cultivars from each other and from other Miscanthus species. Moreover, the resulting phylogenetic tree generated from SNP frequency data parallels the known breeding history of the plants examined. Some of the giant miscanthus plants exhibit considerable sequence divergence. CONCLUSIONS: Here we describe an analysis of Miscanthus in which high-throughput exome sequencing was utilized to differentiate between closely related genotypes despite the current lack of a reference genome sequence. We functionally annotated the exome sequences and provide resources to support Miscanthus systems biology. In addition, we demonstrate the use of the commercial high-performance cloud computing to do computational GO annotation.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254643?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Philippe Chouvarine
Amanda M Cooksey
Fiona M McCarthy
David A Ray
Brian S Baldwin
Shane C Burgess
Daniel G Peterson
spellingShingle Philippe Chouvarine
Amanda M Cooksey
Fiona M McCarthy
David A Ray
Brian S Baldwin
Shane C Burgess
Daniel G Peterson
Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Philippe Chouvarine
Amanda M Cooksey
Fiona M McCarthy
David A Ray
Brian S Baldwin
Shane C Burgess
Daniel G Peterson
author_sort Philippe Chouvarine
title Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.
title_short Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.
title_full Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.
title_fullStr Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.
title_full_unstemmed Transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related Miscanthus lines.
title_sort transcriptome-based differentiation of closely-related miscanthus lines.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Distinguishing between individuals is critical to those conducting animal/plant breeding, food safety/quality research, diagnostic and clinical testing, and evolutionary biology studies. Classical genetic identification studies are based on marker polymorphisms, but polymorphism-based techniques are time and labor intensive and often cannot distinguish between closely related individuals. Illumina sequencing technologies provide the detailed sequence data required for rapid and efficient differentiation of related species, lines/cultivars, and individuals in a cost-effective manner. Here we describe the use of Illumina high-throughput exome sequencing, coupled with SNP mapping, as a rapid means of distinguishing between related cultivars of the lignocellulosic bioenergy crop giant miscanthus (Miscanthus × giganteus). We provide the first exome sequence database for Miscanthus species complete with Gene Ontology (GO) functional annotations. RESULTS: A SNP comparative analysis of rhizome-derived cDNA sequences was successfully utilized to distinguish three Miscanthus × giganteus cultivars from each other and from other Miscanthus species. Moreover, the resulting phylogenetic tree generated from SNP frequency data parallels the known breeding history of the plants examined. Some of the giant miscanthus plants exhibit considerable sequence divergence. CONCLUSIONS: Here we describe an analysis of Miscanthus in which high-throughput exome sequencing was utilized to differentiate between closely related genotypes despite the current lack of a reference genome sequence. We functionally annotated the exome sequences and provide resources to support Miscanthus systems biology. In addition, we demonstrate the use of the commercial high-performance cloud computing to do computational GO annotation.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3254643?pdf=render
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