| Literature DB >> 21049003 |
Heiner Kuhl1, Elena Sarropoulou, Mbaye Tine, Georgios Kotoulas, Antonios Magoulas, Richard Reinhardt.
Abstract
This study presents the first comparative BAC map of the gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata), a highly valuated marine aquaculture fish species in the Mediterranean. High-throughput end sequencing of a BAC library yielded 92,468 reads (60.6 Mbp). Comparative mapping was achieved by anchoring BAC end sequences to the three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus) genome. BACs that were consistently ordered along the stickleback chromosomes accounted for 14,265 clones. A fraction of 5,249 BACs constituted a minimal tiling path that covers 73.5% of the stickleback chromosomes and 70.2% of the genes that have been annotated. The N50 size of 1,485 "BACtigs" consisting of redundant BACs is 337,253 bp. The largest BACtig covers 2.15 Mbp in the stickleback genome. According to the insert size distribution of mapped BACs the sea bream genome is 1.71-fold larger than the stickleback genome. These results represent a valuable tool to researchers in the field and may support future projects to elucidate the whole sea bream genome.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 21049003 PMCID: PMC2964914 DOI: 10.1155/2011/329025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Insert size frequency distribution of consistently mapped sea bream BACs to chromosomes of three-spined stickleback (Gasterosteus aculeatus). Mapped BACs exhibit a shift to lower insert sizes compared to insert sizes of the BACs observed by pulse field gel-electrophoresis (according to manufacturer of the BAC library Amplicon Express, data not shown). This shift reflects the genome size difference between sea bream and stickleback.
Figure 2Placement error frequency distribution observed by BACs that were directly mapped to stickleback chromosomes as well as mapped indirectly by aligning them to seabass sequence that has been placed along the stickleback sequence before. Of the indirectly mapped BACs 96.7% had a placement error of less than 1000 bp.
Figure 3Mapped minimal tiling path BAC clones of sea bream and seabass alongside the stickleback chromosomes VI (a) and XXI (b). While maps in (a) show some differences in regions covered or not covered (marked with black circles), maps in (b) are nearly identical.