| Literature DB >> 24947244 |
Ju Hyeon Kim, Jong Yul Roh, Deok Ho Kwon, Young Ho Kim, Kyungjae A Yoon, Seungil Yoo, Seung-Jae Noh, Junhyung Park, E-Hyun Shin, Mi-Yeoun Park, Si Hyeock Lee1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leptotrombidium pallidum and Leptotrombidium scutellare are the major vector mites for Orientia tsutsugamushi, the causative agent of scrub typhus. Before these organisms can be subjected to whole-genome sequencing, it is necessary to estimate their genome sizes to obtain basic information for establishing the strategies that should be used for genome sequencing and assembly.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24947244 PMCID: PMC4079623 DOI: 10.1186/1756-3305-7-279
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Primers used in this study
| Cloning | EF1α | Fa | TATTGATGCTCCTGGTCACAG | 850 | |
| Rb | GAATTTGCAAGCAATGTGAGC | ||||
| RpS3 | F | GARGAYGGNTAYTCHGGB | 438 | ||
| R | CATRAYYTTNACYTTRATDCC | ||||
| Standard | RpS3 | F | CACGTTTCCGATTCGACGTC | 925 | |
| R | CACAACGGACACATTGTCGG | ||||
| RpS3 | F | CTCGTGAACTGTCAGAAGATG | 794 | ||
| R | CTGCAAGTGGTATTGGTTGTG | ||||
| RpS3 | F | TAGACGAATTCCTTCGTCGAG | 553 | ||
| R | AGAAACGTTGTCAGGTAATGGT | ||||
| EF1α | F | TTGATGCTCCTGGTCACAGA | 842 | ||
| R | GCAAGCAATGTGAGCAGTGT | ||||
| RpS3 | F | ATCATCATTCTCGCCACGCG | 447 | ||
| R | CTTGTCGCAGTAACACATGCC | ||||
| qPCR | RpS3 | F | CATTGAGTTGTACGCCGAGA | 127 | |
| R | ATGTAGCGGAGCACACCATAG | ||||
| RpS3 | F | GTTGTGAAGTGGTTGTTAGTG | 132 | ||
| R | GAAGTACATGACGAGTTGCAG | ||||
| RpS3 | F | ATGTGAAGTTGTCGTTTCCGG | 96 | ||
| R | TTACAAGGGTCACCAGCGTG | ||||
| EF1α | F | GTTAAGGAATTGCGCAGAGG | 123 | ||
| R | GTAACCGTTGGCGATTTGTC | ||||
| RpS3 | F | TCTGACAGAGGCTTGTGTGC | 127 | ||
| R | AGCCTTTCGCTCCAGATTCC | ||||
| EF1α | F | CCGGAGATTGGAACGAAAGG | 120 | ||
| R | TGGACACAACTGAACCACCC | ||||
| RpS3 | F | GCACAATGCGAGTCTCTTCG | 111 | ||
| R | GACTTCGCAACCTTTCGCTC | ||||
aForward primer.
bReverse primer.
Genome sizes of the reference arthropods estimated by the qPCR-based method
| RpS3 | 180 | 182 ± 14 | 195 ± 15 | 95.1 | ||
| RpS3 | 236 | 273 ± 86 | 293 ± 92 | 79.8 | ||
| RpS3 | 90 | 86 ± 36 | 92 ± 39 | 98.9 | ||
aActual genome size information was obtained from references [33,34], and [35] for D. melanogaster, A. mellifera and T. urticae, respectively.
bFor the formula ‘Dolezel et al.’ and ‘Wilhelm et al.’, please refer references [30] and [27], respectively.
Genome sizes of and estimated by the qPCR and k-mer analysis-based method
| | Dolezel | 155 ± 42 | 215 ± 39 | 185 ± 42 | |
| qPCR | Wilhelm | 164 ± 45 | 231 ± 42 | 197 ± 47 | |
| | | | |||
| k-mer analysis | | | | ||
| | Dolezel | 269 ± 11 | 237 ± 20 | 253 ± 22 | |
| qPCR | Wilhelm | 288 ± 12 | 254 ± 22 | 271 ± 24 | |
| | | | |||
| k-mer analysis | |||||
aFor the formula ‘Dolezel et al.’ and ‘Wilhelm et al.’, please refer references [30] and [27], respectively.
Figure 1K-mer frequency distribution curve. All 17-mer sequences were extracted from pre-processed high-quality paired-end reads and plotted the frequency (y-axis) as a function of the depth (x-axis). (A) k-mer curve for L. pallidum. The single main peak indicates a homozygous genomic source. (B) k-mer curve for L. scutellare. Instead of a single peak, minor residual peaks are also shown, indicating the heterozygous nature of the isolated genomic material.
Figure 2Comparison of the genome sizes of arachnids. The genome sizes of 11 arachnids in 4 orders, Ixodes scapularis[41], Rhipicephalus microplus[41], Varroa destructor[42], Metaseiulus occidentalis[26], Archegozetes longisetosus[39], Dermatophagoides pteronyssinus, Psoroptes ovis, Sarcoptes scabiei[25], Tetranychus urticae[35], Leptotrombidium pallidum and Leptotrombidium scutellare, were compared.