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Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species

BACKGROUND: The presence of closely related genomes in polyploid species makes the assembly of total genomic sequence from shotgun sequence reads produced by the current sequencing platforms exceedingly difficult, if not impossible. Genomes of polyploid species could be sequenced following the order...

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Autores principales: Luo, Ming-Cheng, Ma, Yaqin, You, Frank M, Anderson, Olin D, Kopecký, David, Šimková, Hana, Šafář, Jan, Doležel, Jaroslav, Gill, Bikram, McGuire, Patrick E, Dvorak, Jan
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2836288/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20170511
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-122
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author Luo, Ming-Cheng
Ma, Yaqin
You, Frank M
Anderson, Olin D
Kopecký, David
Šimková, Hana
Šafář, Jan
Doležel, Jaroslav
Gill, Bikram
McGuire, Patrick E
Dvorak, Jan
author_facet Luo, Ming-Cheng
Ma, Yaqin
You, Frank M
Anderson, Olin D
Kopecký, David
Šimková, Hana
Šafář, Jan
Doležel, Jaroslav
Gill, Bikram
McGuire, Patrick E
Dvorak, Jan
author_sort Luo, Ming-Cheng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The presence of closely related genomes in polyploid species makes the assembly of total genomic sequence from shotgun sequence reads produced by the current sequencing platforms exceedingly difficult, if not impossible. Genomes of polyploid species could be sequenced following the ordered-clone sequencing approach employing contigs of bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones and BAC-based physical maps. Although BAC contigs can currently be constructed for virtually any diploid organism with the SNaPshot high-information-content-fingerprinting (HICF) technology, it is currently unknown if this is also true for polyploid species. It is possible that BAC clones from orthologous regions of homoeologous chromosomes would share numerous restriction fragments and be therefore included into common contigs. Because of this and other concerns, physical mapping utilizing the SNaPshot HICF of BAC libraries of polyploid species has not been pursued and the possibility of doing so has not been assessed. The sole exception has been in common wheat, an allohexaploid in which it is possible to construct single-chromosome or single-chromosome-arm BAC libraries from DNA of flow-sorted chromosomes and bypass the obstacles created by polyploidy. RESULTS: The potential of the SNaPshot HICF technology for physical mapping of polyploid plants utilizing global BAC libraries was evaluated by assembling contigs of fingerprinted clones in an in silico merged BAC library composed of single-chromosome libraries of two wheat homoeologous chromosome arms, 3AS and 3DS, and complete chromosome 3B. Because the chromosome arm origin of each clone was known, it was possible to estimate the fidelity of contig assembly. On average 97.78% or more clones, depending on the library, were from a single chromosome arm. A large portion of the remaining clones was shown to be library contamination from other chromosomes, a feature that is unavoidable during the construction of single-chromosome BAC libraries. CONCLUSIONS: The negligibly low level of incorporation of clones from homoeologous chromosome arms into a contig during contig assembly suggested that it is feasible to construct contigs and physical maps using global BAC libraries of wheat and almost certainly also of other plant polyploid species with genome sizes comparable to that of wheat. Because of the high purity of the resulting assembled contigs, they can be directly used for genome sequencing. It is currently unknown but possible that equally good BAC contigs can be also constructed for polyploid species containing smaller, more gene-rich genomes.
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spelling pubmed-28362882010-03-11 Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species Luo, Ming-Cheng Ma, Yaqin You, Frank M Anderson, Olin D Kopecký, David Šimková, Hana Šafář, Jan Doležel, Jaroslav Gill, Bikram McGuire, Patrick E Dvorak, Jan BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: The presence of closely related genomes in polyploid species makes the assembly of total genomic sequence from shotgun sequence reads produced by the current sequencing platforms exceedingly difficult, if not impossible. Genomes of polyploid species could be sequenced following the ordered-clone sequencing approach employing contigs of bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones and BAC-based physical maps. Although BAC contigs can currently be constructed for virtually any diploid organism with the SNaPshot high-information-content-fingerprinting (HICF) technology, it is currently unknown if this is also true for polyploid species. It is possible that BAC clones from orthologous regions of homoeologous chromosomes would share numerous restriction fragments and be therefore included into common contigs. Because of this and other concerns, physical mapping utilizing the SNaPshot HICF of BAC libraries of polyploid species has not been pursued and the possibility of doing so has not been assessed. The sole exception has been in common wheat, an allohexaploid in which it is possible to construct single-chromosome or single-chromosome-arm BAC libraries from DNA of flow-sorted chromosomes and bypass the obstacles created by polyploidy. RESULTS: The potential of the SNaPshot HICF technology for physical mapping of polyploid plants utilizing global BAC libraries was evaluated by assembling contigs of fingerprinted clones in an in silico merged BAC library composed of single-chromosome libraries of two wheat homoeologous chromosome arms, 3AS and 3DS, and complete chromosome 3B. Because the chromosome arm origin of each clone was known, it was possible to estimate the fidelity of contig assembly. On average 97.78% or more clones, depending on the library, were from a single chromosome arm. A large portion of the remaining clones was shown to be library contamination from other chromosomes, a feature that is unavoidable during the construction of single-chromosome BAC libraries. CONCLUSIONS: The negligibly low level of incorporation of clones from homoeologous chromosome arms into a contig during contig assembly suggested that it is feasible to construct contigs and physical maps using global BAC libraries of wheat and almost certainly also of other plant polyploid species with genome sizes comparable to that of wheat. Because of the high purity of the resulting assembled contigs, they can be directly used for genome sequencing. It is currently unknown but possible that equally good BAC contigs can be also constructed for polyploid species containing smaller, more gene-rich genomes. BioMed Central 2010-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC2836288/ /pubmed/20170511 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-122 Text en Copyright ©2010 Luo et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Luo, Ming-Cheng
Ma, Yaqin
You, Frank M
Anderson, Olin D
Kopecký, David
Šimková, Hana
Šafář, Jan
Doležel, Jaroslav
Gill, Bikram
McGuire, Patrick E
Dvorak, Jan
Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
title Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
title_full Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
title_fullStr Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
title_short Feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
title_sort feasibility of physical map construction from fingerprinted bacterial artificial chromosome libraries of polyploid plant species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2836288/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20170511
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-122
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