A comprehensive resource of drought- and salinity- responsive ESTs for gene discovery and marker development in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)

Publication Overview
TitleA comprehensive resource of drought- and salinity- responsive ESTs for gene discovery and marker development in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.)
AuthorsVarshney RK, Hiremath PJ, Lekha P, Kashiwagi J, Balaji J, Deokar AA, Vadez V, Xiao Y, Srinivasan R, Gaur PM, Siddique KH, Town CD, Hoisington DA
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC genomics
Volume10
Year2009
Page(s)523
CitationVarshney RK, Hiremath PJ, Lekha P, Kashiwagi J, Balaji J, Deokar AA, Vadez V, Xiao Y, Srinivasan R, Gaur PM, Siddique KH, Town CD, Hoisington DA. A comprehensive resource of drought- and salinity- responsive ESTs for gene discovery and marker development in chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.). BMC genomics. 2009; 10:523.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.), an important grain legume crop of the world is seriously challenged by terminal drought and salinity stresses. However, very limited number of molecular markers and candidate genes are available for undertaking molecular breeding in chickpea to tackle these stresses. This study reports generation and analysis of comprehensive resource of drought- and salinity-responsive expressed sequence tags (ESTs) and gene-based markers.

RESULTS
A total of 20,162 (18,435 high quality) drought- and salinity- responsive ESTs were generated from ten different root tissue cDNA libraries of chickpea. Sequence editing, clustering and assembly analysis resulted in 6,404 unigenes (1,590 contigs and 4,814 singletons). Functional annotation of unigenes based on BLASTX analysis showed that 46.3% (2,965) had significant similarity (< or =1E-05) to sequences in the non-redundant UniProt database. BLASTN analysis of unique sequences with ESTs of four legume species (Medicago, Lotus, soybean and groundnut) and three model plant species (rice, Arabidopsis and poplar) provided insights on conserved genes across legumes as well as novel transcripts for chickpea. Of 2,965 (46.3%) significant unigenes, only 2,071 (32.3%) unigenes could be functionally categorised according to Gene Ontology (GO) descriptions. A total of 2,029 sequences containing 3,728 simple sequence repeats (SSRs) were identified and 177 new EST-SSR markers were developed. Experimental validation of a set of 77 SSR markers on 24 genotypes revealed 230 alleles with an average of 4.6 alleles per marker and average polymorphism information content (PIC) value of 0.43. Besides SSR markers, 21,405 high confidence single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 742 contigs (with > or = 5 ESTs) were also identified. Recognition sites for restriction enzymes were identified for 7,884 SNPs in 240 contigs. Hierarchical clustering of 105 selected contigs provided clues about stress- responsive candidate genes and their expression profile showed predominance in specific stress-challenged libraries.

CONCLUSION
Generated set of chickpea ESTs serves as a resource of high quality transcripts for gene discovery and development of functional markers associated with abiotic stress tolerance that will be helpful to facilitate chickpea breeding. Mapping of gene-based markers in chickpea will also add more anchoring points to align genomes of chickpea and other legume species.

Features
This publication contains information about 205 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
CGMM110CGMM110genetic_marker
CGMM111CGMM111genetic_marker
CGMM112CGMM112genetic_marker
CGMM113CGMM113genetic_marker
CGMM114CGMM114genetic_marker
CGMM115CGMM115genetic_marker
CGMM116CGMM116genetic_marker
CGMM117CGMM117genetic_marker
CGMM118CGMM118genetic_marker
CGMM119CGMM119genetic_marker
CGMM120CGMM120genetic_marker
CGMM121CGMM121genetic_marker
CGMM122CGMM122genetic_marker
CGMM123CGMM123genetic_marker
CGMM124CGMM124genetic_marker
CGMM125CGMM125genetic_marker
CGMM126CGMM126genetic_marker
CGMM127CGMM127genetic_marker
CGMM128CGMM128genetic_marker
CGMM129CGMM129genetic_marker
CGMM130CGMM130genetic_marker
CGMM131CGMM131genetic_marker
CGMM132CGMM132genetic_marker
CGMM133CGMM133genetic_marker
CGMM134CGMM134genetic_marker

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
DOI10.1186/1471-2164-10-523
Elocation10.1186/1471-2164-10-523
Journal CountryEngland
Publication ModelElectronic
ISSN1471-2164
eISSN1471-2164
Publication Date2009
Journal AbbreviationBMC Genomics
Publication TypeResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't