Comprehensive transcriptome analysis of the highly complex Pisum sativum genome using next generation sequencing

Publication Overview
TitleComprehensive transcriptome analysis of the highly complex Pisum sativum genome using next generation sequencing
AuthorsFranssen SU, Shrestha RP, Bräutigam A, Bornberg-Bauer E, Weber AP
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC genomics
Volume12
Year2011
Page(s)227
CitationFranssen SU, Shrestha RP, Bräutigam A, Bornberg-Bauer E, Weber AP. Comprehensive transcriptome analysis of the highly complex Pisum sativum genome using next generation sequencing. BMC genomics. 2011; 12:227.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
The garden pea, Pisum sativum, is among the best-investigated legume plants and of significant agro-commercial relevance. Pisum sativum has a large and complex genome and accordingly few comprehensive genomic resources exist.

RESULTS
We analyzed the pea transcriptome at the highest possible amount of accuracy by current technology. We used next generation sequencing with the Roche/454 platform and evaluated and compared a variety of approaches, including diverse tissue libraries, normalization, alternative sequencing technologies, saturation estimation and diverse assembly strategies. We generated libraries from flowers, leaves, cotyledons, epi- and hypocotyl, and etiolated and light treated etiolated seedlings, comprising a total of 450 megabases. Libraries were assembled into 324,428 unigenes in a first pass assembly.A second pass assembly reduced the amount to 81,449 unigenes but caused a significant number of chimeras. Analyses of the assemblies identified the assembly step as a major possibility for improvement. By recording frequencies of Arabidopsis orthologs hit by randomly drawn reads and fitting parameters of the saturation curve we concluded that sequencing was exhaustive. For leaf libraries we found normalization allows partial recovery of expression strength aside the desired effect of increased coverage. Based on theoretical and biological considerations we concluded that the sequence reads in the database tagged the vast majority of transcripts in the aerial tissues. A pathway representation analysis showed the merits of sampling multiple aerial tissues to increase the number of tagged genes. All results have been made available as a fully annotated database in fasta format.

CONCLUSIONS
We conclude that the approach taken resulted in a high quality - dataset which serves well as a first comprehensive reference set for the model legume pea. We suggest future deep sequencing transcriptome projects of species lacking a genomics backbone will need to concentrate mainly on resolving the issues of redundancy and paralogy during transcriptome assembly.

Features
This publication contains information about 84,267 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
JI953522JI953522.1region
JI953521JI953521.1region
JI953520JI953520.1region
JI953519JI953519.1region
JI953518JI953518.1region
JI953517JI953517.1region
JI953516JI953516.1region
JI953515JI953515.1region
JI953514JI953514.1region
JI953513JI953513.1region
JI953512JI953512.1region
JI953511JI953511.1region
JI953510JI953510.1region
JI953509JI953509.1region
JI953508JI953508.1region
JI953507JI953507.1region
JI953506JI953506.1region
JI953505JI953505.1region
JI953504JI953504.1region
JI953503JI953503.1region
JI953502JI953502.1region
JI953501JI953501.1region
JI953500JI953500.1region
JI953499JI953499.1region
JI953498JI953498.1region

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication Date2011
Journal AbbreviationBMC Genomics
DOI10.1186/1471-2164-12-227
Elocation10.1186/1471-2164-12-227
Journal CountryEngland
Publication ModelElectronic
ISSN1471-2164
eISSN1471-2164
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Publication TypeResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't