| Literature DB >> 22757964 |
Zhiwen Wang1, Neil Hobson, Leonardo Galindo, Shilin Zhu, Daihu Shi, Joshua McDill, Linfeng Yang, Simon Hawkins, Godfrey Neutelings, Raju Datla, Georgina Lambert, David W Galbraith, Christopher J Grassa, Armando Geraldes, Quentin C Cronk, Christopher Cullis, Prasanta K Dash, Polumetla A Kumar, Sylvie Cloutier, Andrew G Sharpe, Gane K-S Wong, Jun Wang, Michael K Deyholos.
Abstract
Flax (Linum usitatissimum) is an ancient crop that is widely cultivated as a source of fiber, oil and medicinally relevant compounds. To accelerate crop improvement, we performed whole-genome shotgun sequencing of the nuclear genome of flax. Seven paired-end libraries ranging in size from 300 bp to 10 kb were sequenced using an Illumina genome analyzer. A de novo assembly, comprised exclusively of deep-coverage (approximately 94× raw, approximately 69× filtered) short-sequence reads (44-100 bp), produced a set of scaffolds with N(50) =694 kb, including contigs with N(50)=20.1 kb. The contig assembly contained 302 Mb of non-redundant sequence representing an estimated 81% genome coverage. Up to 96% of published flax ESTs aligned to the whole-genome shotgun scaffolds. However, comparisons with independently sequenced BACs and fosmids showed some mis-assembly of regions at the genome scale. A total of 43384 protein-coding genes were predicted in the whole-genome shotgun assembly, and up to 93% of published flax ESTs, and 86% of A. thaliana genes aligned to these predicted genes, indicating excellent coverage and accuracy at the gene level. Analysis of the synonymous substitution rates (K(s) ) observed within duplicate gene pairs was consistent with a recent (5-9 MYA) whole-genome duplication in flax. Within the predicted proteome, we observed enrichment of many conserved domains (Pfam-A) that may contribute to the unique properties of this crop, including agglutinin proteins. Together these results show that de novo assembly, based solely on whole-genome shotgun short-sequence reads, is an efficient means of obtaining nearly complete genome sequence information for some plant species.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22757964 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-313X.2012.05093.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plant J ISSN: 0960-7412 Impact factor: 6.417