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Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project

BACKGROUND: Subtractive hybridization methods are valuable tools for identifying differentially regulated genes in a given tissue avoiding redundant sequencing of clones representing the same expressed genes, maximizing detection of low abundant transcripts and thus, affecting the efficiency and cos...

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Autores principales: Fernández, Paula, Paniego, Norma, Lew, Sergio, Hopp, H Esteban, Heinz, Ruth A
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC270089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14519210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-4-40
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author Fernández, Paula
Paniego, Norma
Lew, Sergio
Hopp, H Esteban
Heinz, Ruth A
author_facet Fernández, Paula
Paniego, Norma
Lew, Sergio
Hopp, H Esteban
Heinz, Ruth A
author_sort Fernández, Paula
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Subtractive hybridization methods are valuable tools for identifying differentially regulated genes in a given tissue avoiding redundant sequencing of clones representing the same expressed genes, maximizing detection of low abundant transcripts and thus, affecting the efficiency and cost effectiveness of small scale cDNA sequencing projects aimed to the specific identification of useful genes for breeding purposes. The objective of this work is to evaluate alternative strategies to high-throughput sequencing projects for the identification of novel genes differentially expressed in sunflower as a source of organ-specific genetic markers that can be functionally associated to important traits. RESULTS: Differential organ-specific ESTs were generated from leaf, stem, root and flower bud at two developmental stages (R1 and R4). The use of different sources of RNA as tester and driver cDNA for the construction of differential libraries was evaluated as a tool for detection of rare or low abundant transcripts. Organ-specificity ranged from 75 to 100% of non-redundant sequences in the different cDNA libraries. Sequence redundancy varied according to the target and driver cDNA used in each case. The R4 flower cDNA library was the less redundant library with 62% of unique sequences. Out of a total of 919 sequences that were edited and annotated, 318 were non-redundant sequences. Comparison against sequences in public databases showed that 60% of non-redundant sequences showed significant similarity to known sequences. The number of predicted novel genes varied among the different cDNA libraries, ranging from 56% in the R4 flower to 16 % in the R1 flower bud library. Comparison with sunflower ESTs on public databases showed that 197 of non-redundant sequences (60%) did not exhibit significant similarity to previously reported sunflower ESTs. This approach helped to successfully isolate a significant number of new reported sequences putatively related to responses to important agronomic traits and key regulatory and physiological genes. CONCLUSIONS: The application of suppressed subtracted hybridization technology not only enabled the cost effective isolation of differentially expressed sequences but it also allowed the identification of novel sequences in sunflower from a relative small number of analyzed sequences when compared to major sequencing projects.
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spelling pubmed-2700892003-11-21 Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project Fernández, Paula Paniego, Norma Lew, Sergio Hopp, H Esteban Heinz, Ruth A BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Subtractive hybridization methods are valuable tools for identifying differentially regulated genes in a given tissue avoiding redundant sequencing of clones representing the same expressed genes, maximizing detection of low abundant transcripts and thus, affecting the efficiency and cost effectiveness of small scale cDNA sequencing projects aimed to the specific identification of useful genes for breeding purposes. The objective of this work is to evaluate alternative strategies to high-throughput sequencing projects for the identification of novel genes differentially expressed in sunflower as a source of organ-specific genetic markers that can be functionally associated to important traits. RESULTS: Differential organ-specific ESTs were generated from leaf, stem, root and flower bud at two developmental stages (R1 and R4). The use of different sources of RNA as tester and driver cDNA for the construction of differential libraries was evaluated as a tool for detection of rare or low abundant transcripts. Organ-specificity ranged from 75 to 100% of non-redundant sequences in the different cDNA libraries. Sequence redundancy varied according to the target and driver cDNA used in each case. The R4 flower cDNA library was the less redundant library with 62% of unique sequences. Out of a total of 919 sequences that were edited and annotated, 318 were non-redundant sequences. Comparison against sequences in public databases showed that 60% of non-redundant sequences showed significant similarity to known sequences. The number of predicted novel genes varied among the different cDNA libraries, ranging from 56% in the R4 flower to 16 % in the R1 flower bud library. Comparison with sunflower ESTs on public databases showed that 197 of non-redundant sequences (60%) did not exhibit significant similarity to previously reported sunflower ESTs. This approach helped to successfully isolate a significant number of new reported sequences putatively related to responses to important agronomic traits and key regulatory and physiological genes. CONCLUSIONS: The application of suppressed subtracted hybridization technology not only enabled the cost effective isolation of differentially expressed sequences but it also allowed the identification of novel sequences in sunflower from a relative small number of analyzed sequences when compared to major sequencing projects. BioMed Central 2003-09-30 /pmc/articles/PMC270089/ /pubmed/14519210 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-4-40 Text en Copyright © 2003 Fernández et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fernández, Paula
Paniego, Norma
Lew, Sergio
Hopp, H Esteban
Heinz, Ruth A
Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project
title Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project
title_full Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project
title_fullStr Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project
title_full_unstemmed Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project
title_short Differential representation of sunflower ESTs in enriched organ-specific cDNA libraries in a small scale sequencing project
title_sort differential representation of sunflower ests in enriched organ-specific cdna libraries in a small scale sequencing project
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC270089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14519210
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-4-40
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