| Literature DB >> 14684821 |
C A Whitelaw1, W B Barbazuk, G Pertea, A P Chan, F Cheung, Y Lee, L Zheng, S van Heeringen, S Karamycheva, J L Bennetzen, P SanMiguel, N Lakey, J Bedell, Y Yuan, M A Budiman, A Resnick, S Van Aken, T Utterback, S Riedmuller, M Williams, T Feldblyum, K Schubert, R Beachy, C M Fraser, J Quackenbush.
Abstract
Approximately 80% of the maize genome comprises highly repetitive sequences interspersed with single-copy, gene-rich sequences, and standard genome sequencing strategies are not readily adaptable to this type of genome. Methodologies that enrich for genic sequences might more rapidly generate useful results from complex genomes. Equivalent numbers of clones from maize selected by techniques called methylation filtering and High C0t selection were sequenced to generate approximately 200,000 reads (approximately 132 megabases), which were assembled into contigs. Combination of the two techniques resulted in a sixfold reduction in the effective genome size and a fourfold increase in the gene identification rate in comparison to a nonenriched library.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2003 PMID: 14684821 DOI: 10.1126/science.1090047
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728