| Literature DB >> 18584031 |
Takashi Matsumoto1, Jianzhong Wu, Baltazar A Antonio, Takuji Sasaki.
Abstract
Rice is one of the most important crops in the world. Although genetic improvement is a key technology for the acceleration of rice breeding, a lack of genome information had restricted efforts in molecular-based breeding until the completion of the high-quality rice genome sequence, which opened new opportunities for research in various areas of genomics. The syntenic relationship of the rice genome to other cereal genomes makes the rice genome invaluable for understanding how cereal genomes function. Producing an accurate genome sequence is not an easy task, and it is becoming more important as sequence deviations among, and even within, species highlight functional or evolutionary implications for comparative genomics.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18584031 PMCID: PMC2430989 DOI: 10.1155/2008/348621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Plant Genomics ISSN: 1687-5389
Figure 1Four steps used for the finishing process to sequence completion.
Figure 2RiceGAAS annotation view, showing results from application of gene prediction software and similarity searches. Upper box: a DNA strand from left (5′) to right (3′). Lower box: from right (5′) to left (3′).
Figure 3Structural comparisons of CentO domains between Nipponbare chromosomes 4 and 8. Yellow ovals and red arrows indicate the position of CentO arrays and the direction of the 155-bp tandem repeats within each array, respectively. Length of arrays ranges from 477 to 8571 bp in chromosome 4 and 7616 to 34589 bp in chromosome 8.
Mapped and sequenced rice telomeres.
| Clone name | Accession no. | Copies* | Chr |
|---|---|---|---|
| OSJNOa264G09 | AP008219 | 17 | 1S |
| OSJNOa183H18 | AP006851 | 52 | 2S |
| OSJNOa246I10 | AP008220 | 69 | 2L |
| OSJNOa070P15 | AP009053 | 27 | 3S |
| OSJNOa083A04 | AP009055 | 75 | 3L |
| OSJNOa076I12 | AP009056 | 129 | 4S |
| OSJNOa281H13 | AP009057 | 68 | 4L |
| OSJNOa070B13 | AP009052 | 53 | 5S |
| OSJNOa230J22 | AP006854 | 37 | 6L |
| OSJNOa219C16 | AP008222 | 17 | 7S |
| OSJNOa136M23 | AP008223 | 127 | 7L |
| OSJNOa162K02 | AP008224 | 55 | 8S |
| OSJNOa063K24 | AP009051 | 162 | 9S |
| OSJNOa073B23 | AP009054 | 62 | 10S |
*Copies of telomere-specific repeats detected from the sequenced clones.
Figure 4In silico physical map of Kasalath chromosome 8, based on the Nipponbare sequence. Green vertical bars indicate BAC clones (with K numbers) mapped against Nipponbare genome sequence (shown at left with landmarks).
Sequence comparison of BAC clone OR_CBa0004O24, Sanger versus Pyrosequencing.
| Low-quality threshold | ||
|---|---|---|
| Score 30 | Score 40 | |
| Number of alignments checked | 34 | 34 |
| Total length of alignments | 132229 | 132229 |
| Total HQ bases | 131759 | 130639 |
| Total LQ bases | 470 | 1590 |
| “In/del” type discrepancy | 20 | 20 |
|
| 15 | 15 |
|
| 5 | 5 |
| LQ insertion, total | 5 | 6 |
|
| 3 | 3 |
|
| 2 | 3 |
| HQ insertion, total | 15 | 14 |
|
| 12 | 12 |
|
| 3 | 2 |
| “SNP” type discrepancy | 60 | 60 |
|
| 54 | 47 |
|
| 5 | 12 |
|
| 1 | 1 |
|
| 0 | 0 |
| Discrepancy rate (%) | 0.0409 | 0.0359 |
| Accuracy rate (%) | 99.9591 | 99.9641 |