| Literature DB >> 31250652 |
Xiaogang Ye1, Xiaoli Tang1, Xiaoxiao Wang1, Jiaqian Che1, Meiyu Wu1, Jianshe Liang1, Lupeng Ye1, Qiujie Qian1, Jianying Li1, Zhengying You1, Yuyu Zhang1, Shaohua Wang1, Boxiong Zhong1.
Abstract
The silkworm genome has been deeply sequenced and assembled, but accurate genome annotation, which is important for modern biological research, remains far from complete. To improve silkworm genome annotation, we carried out a proteogenomics analysis using 9.8 million mass spectra collected from different tissues and developmental stages of the silkworm. The results confirmed the translational products of 4307 existing gene models and identified 1701 novel genome search-specific peptides (GSSPs). Using these GSSPs, 74 novel gene-coding sequences were identified, and 121 existing gene models were corrected. We also identified 1182 novel junction peptides based on an exon-skipping database that resulted in the identification of 973 alternative splicing sites. Furthermore, we performed RNA-seq analysis to improve silkworm genome annotation at the transcriptional level. A total of 1704 new transcripts and 1136 new exons were identified, 2581 untranslated regions (UTRs) were revised, and 1301 alternative splicing (AS) genes were identified. The transcriptomics results were integrated with the proteomics data to further complement and verify the new annotations. In addition, 14 incorrect genes and 10 skipped exons were verified using the two analysis methods. Altogether, we identified 1838 new transcripts and 1593 AS genes and revised 5074 existing genes using proteogenomics and transcriptome analyses. Data are available via ProteomeXchange with identifier PXD009672. The large-scale proteogenomics and transcriptome analyses in this study will greatly improve silkworm genome annotation and contribute to future studies.Entities:
Keywords: alternative splicing; gene function; proteogenomics; silkworm; transcriptomics
Year: 2019 PMID: 31250652 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jproteome.8b00965
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Proteome Res ISSN: 1535-3893 Impact factor: 4.466