De novo assembly and characterisation of the field pea transcriptome using RNA-Seq

Publication Overview
TitleDe novo assembly and characterisation of the field pea transcriptome using RNA-Seq
AuthorsSudheesh S, Sawbridge TI, Cogan NO, Kennedy P, Forster JW, Kaur S
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC genomics
Volume16
Issue1
Year2015
Page(s)611
CitationSudheesh S, Sawbridge TI, Cogan NO, Kennedy P, Forster JW, Kaur S. De novo assembly and characterisation of the field pea transcriptome using RNA-Seq. BMC genomics. 2015; 16(1):611.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Field pea (Pisum sativum L.) is a cool-season grain legume that is cultivated world-wide for both human consumption and stock-feed purposes. Enhancement of genetic and genomic resources for field pea will permit improved understanding of the control of traits relevant to crop productivity and quality. Advances in second-generation sequencing and associated bioinformatics analysis now provide unprecedented opportunities for the development of such resources. The objective of this study was to perform transcriptome sequencing and characterisation from two genotypes of field pea that differ in terms of seed and plant morphological characteristics.

RESULTS
Transcriptome sequencing was performed with RNA templates from multiple tissues of the field pea genotypes Kaspa and Parafield. Tissue samples were collected at various growth stages, and a total of 23 cDNA libraries were sequenced using Illumina high-throughput sequencing platforms. A total of 407 and 352 million paired-end reads from the Kaspa and Parafield transcriptomes, respectively were assembled into 129,282 and 149,272 contigs, which were filtered on the basis of known gene annotations, presence of open reading frames (ORFs), reciprocal matches and degree of coverage. Totals of 126,335 contigs from Kaspa and 145,730 from Parafield were subsequently selected as the reference set. Reciprocal sequence analysis revealed that c. 87 % of contigs were expressed in both cultivars, while a small proportion were unique to each genotype. Reads from different libraries were aligned to the genotype-specific assemblies in order to identify and characterise expression of contigs on a tissue-specific basis, of which 87 % were expressed in more than one tissue, while others showed distinct expression patterns in specific tissues, providing unique transcriptome signatures.

CONCLUSION
This study provided a comprehensive assembled and annotated transcriptome set for field pea that can be used for development of genetic markers, in order to assess genetic diversity, construct linkage maps, perform trait-dissection and implement whole-genome selection strategies in varietal improvement programs, as well to identify target genes for genetic modification approaches on the basis of annotation and expression analysis. In addition, the reference field pea transcriptome will prove highly valuable for comparative genomics studies and construction of a finalised genome sequence.

Features
This publication contains information about 271,056 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
GCMO01019326GCMO01019326.1region
GCMO01019327GCMO01019327.1region
GCMO01019328GCMO01019328.1region
GCMO01019329GCMO01019329.1region
GCMO01019330GCMO01019330.1region
GCMO01019331GCMO01019331.1region
GCMO01019332GCMO01019332.1region
GCMO01019333GCMO01019333.1region
GCMO01019334GCMO01019334.1region
GCMO01019335GCMO01019335.1region
GCMO01019336GCMO01019336.1region
GCMO01019337GCMO01019337.1region
GCMO01019338GCMO01019338.1region
GCMO01019339GCMO01019339.1region
GCMO01019340GCMO01019340.1region
GCMO01019341GCMO01019341.1region
GCMO01019342GCMO01019342.1region
GCMO01019343GCMO01019343.1region
GCMO01019344GCMO01019344.1region
GCMO01019345GCMO01019345.1region
GCMO01019346GCMO01019346.1region
GCMO01019347GCMO01019347.1region
GCMO01019348GCMO01019348.1region
GCMO01019349GCMO01019349.1region
GCMO01019350GCMO01019350.1region

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryEngland
Publication ModelElectronic
ISSN1471-2164
eISSN1471-2164
Publication Date2015
Journal AbbreviationBMC Genomics
DOI10.1186/s12864-015-1815-7
Elocation10.1186/s12864-015-1815-7