<p>Transcriptome sequencing for high throughput SNP development and genetic mapping in Pea</p>

Publication Overview
TitleTranscriptome sequencing for high throughput SNP development and genetic mapping in Pea
AuthorsDuarte J, Riviere N, Barabger A, Aubert G, Burstin J, Cornet L, Lavaud C, Lejeune-Henaut I, Martinant JP, Pichon JP, Pilet-Nayel ML, Boutet G
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC Genomics
Volume15
Year2014
Page(s)126
CitationDuarte J, Riviere N, Barabger A, Aubert G, Burstin J, Cornet L, Lavaud C, Lejeune-Henaut I, Martinant JP, Pichon JP, Pilet-Nayel ML, Boutet G. Transcriptome sequencing for high throughput SNP development and genetic mapping in Pea. BMC Genomics. 2014; 15:126.

Abstract

Background: Pea has a complex genome of 4.3 Gb for which only limited genomic resources are available to date. Although SNP markers are now highly valuable for research and modern breeding, only a few are described and used in pea for genetic diversity and linkage analysis. Results: We developed a large resource by cDNA sequencing of 8 genotypes representative of modern breeding material using the Roche 454 technology, combining both long reads (400 bp) and high coverage (3.8 million reads, reaching a total of 1,369 megabases). Sequencing data were assembled and generated a 68 K unigene set, from which 41 K were annotated from their best blast hit against the model species Medicago truncatula. Annotated contigs showed an even distribution along M. truncatula pseudochromosomes, suggesting a good representation of the pea genome. 10 K pea contigs were found to be polymorphic among the genetic material surveyed, corresponding to 35 K SNPs. We validated a subset of 1538 SNPs through the GoldenGate assay, proving their ability to structure a diversity panel of breeding germplasm. Among them, 1340 were genetically mapped and used to build a new consensus map comprising a total of 2070 markers. Based on blast analysis, we could establish 1252 bridges between our pea consensus map and the pseudochromosomes of M. truncatula, which provides new insight on synteny between the two species. Conclusions: Our approach created significant new resources in pea, i.e. the most comprehensive genetic map to date tightly linked to the model species M. truncatula and a large SNP resource for both academic research and breeding.
Features
This publication contains information about 2,066 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
BgluBglugenetic_marker
P5I1C14P5I1C14genetic_marker
BNI2N15BNI2N15genetic_marker
DCL2DCL2genetic_marker
TNE3A01bTNE3A01bgenetic_marker
eSSR317-252eSSR317-252genetic_marker
E12.1250E12.1250genetic_marker
CE007D06CE007D06genetic_marker
CI002P17CI002P17genetic_marker
AC10_376AC10_376genetic_marker
TE002M09TE002M09genetic_marker
TNE03P02TNE03P02genetic_marker
SCARL01SCARL01genetic_marker
AC10-376AC10-376genetic_marker
GspGspgenetic_marker
eSSR195-160eSSR195-160genetic_marker
AC39aAC39agenetic_marker
AD85-202AD85-202genetic_marker
AB125-425AB125-425genetic_marker
Ps900150Ps900150genetic_marker
Dof3FokIDof3FokIgenetic_marker
TNE03G10TNE03G10genetic_marker
G09.700G09.700genetic_marker
eSSR418-135eSSR418-135genetic_marker
TI001A12TI001A12genetic_marker

Pages

Featuremaps
This publication contains information about 1 maps:
Map Name
Pea-Composite_Map-RIL
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
URLhttp://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2164/15/126