Literature DB >> 15838542

A bacterial artificial chromosome based physical map of the Ustilago maydis genome.

Khalid Meksem1, Jeffry Shultz, Faiza Tebbji, Aziz Jamai, Jürgen Henrich, Harald Kranz, Monika Arenz, Thomas Schlueter, Hirofumi Ishihara, Lavu N Jyothi, Hong-Bin Zhang, David A Lightfoot.   

Abstract

Ustilago maydis, a basidiomycete, is a model organism among phytopathogenic fungi. A physical map of U. maydis strain 521 was developed from bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones. BAC fingerprints used polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis to separate restriction fragments. Fragments were labeled at the HindIII site and co-digested with HaeIII to reduce fragments to 50-750 bp. Contiguous overlapping sets of clones (contigs) were assembled at nine stringencies (from P < or = 1 x 10(-6) to 1 x 10(-24)). Each assembly nucleated contigs with different percentages of bands overlapping between clones (from 20% to 97%). The number of clones per contig decreased linearly from 41 to 12 from P < or = 1 x 10(-7) to 1 x 10 (-12). The number of separate contigs increased from 56 to 150 over the same range. A hybridization-based physical map of the same BAC clones was compared with the fingerprint contigs built at P < or = 1 x 10(-7). The two methods provided consistent physical maps that were largely validated by genome sequence. The combined hybridization and fingerprint physical map provided a minimum tile path composed of 258 BAC clones (18-20 Mbp) distributed among 28 merged contigs. The genome of U. maydis was estimated to be 20.5 Mbp by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and 24 Mbp by BAC fingerprints. There were 23 separate chromosomes inferred by both pulsed-field gel electrophoresis and fingerprint contigs. Only 11 of the tile path BAC clones contained recognizable centromere, telomere, and subtelomere repeats (high-copy DNA), suggesting that repeats caused some false merges. There were 247 tile path BAC clones that encompassed about 17.5 Mbp of low-copy DNA sequence. BAC clones are available for repeat and unique gene cluster analysis including tDNA-mediated transformation. Program FingerPrint Contigs maps aligned with each chromosome can be viewed at http://www.siu.edu/~meksem/ustilago_maydis/.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15838542     DOI: 10.1139/g04-099

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genome        ISSN: 0831-2796            Impact factor:   2.166


  5 in total

Review 1.  A Matter of Scale and Dimensions: Chromatin of Chromosome Landmarks in the Fungi.

Authors:  Allyson A Erlendson; Steven Friedman; Michael Freitag
Journal:  Microbiol Spectr       Date:  2017-07

2.  Construction and characterization of a bacterial artificial chromosome library of the causal agent of Black Sigatoka fungal leaf spot disease of banana and plantain, Mycosphaerella fijiensis.

Authors:  Blondy Canto-Canché; Diana Karina Guillén-Maldonado; Leticia Peraza-Echeverría; Laura Conde-Ferráez; Andrew James-Kay
Journal:  Mol Biotechnol       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 2.860

3.  Three minimum tile paths from bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of the soybean (Glycine max cv. 'Forrest'): tools for structural and functional genomics.

Authors:  J L Shultz; C Yesudas; S Yaegashi; A J Afzal; S Kazi; D A Lightfoot
Journal:  Plant Methods       Date:  2006-05-25       Impact factor: 4.993

4.  Gene discovery and transcript analyses in the corn smut pathogen Ustilago maydis: expressed sequence tag and genome sequence comparison.

Authors:  Eric C H Ho; Matt J Cahill; Barry J Saville
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2007-09-24       Impact factor: 3.969

5.  A BAC based physical map and genome survey of the rice false smut fungus Villosiclava virens.

Authors:  Xiaoming Wang; Qingli Liu; Hao Wang; Chao-Xi Luo; Gejiao Wang; Meizhong Luo
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2013-12-16       Impact factor: 3.969

  5 in total

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