Sequence, annotation, and analysis of synteny between rice chromosome 3 and diverged grass species
Author(s) -
C. Robin Buell,
Qiaoping Yuan,
Shu Ouyang,
Jia Liu,
W. Zhu,
Aihui Wang,
Rama Maiti,
Brian Haas,
Jennifer R. Wortman,
Mihaela Pertea,
Kristine Jones,
Mary Kim,
Larry Overton,
Tamara Tsitrin,
Douglas Fadrosh,
Jayati Bera,
Bruce Weaver,
Shaohua Jin,
Shivani Johri,
Matt Reardon,
Kristen Webb,
Jessica Hill,
Kelly Moffat,
Luke Tallon,
Susan Van Aken,
Matthew Lewis,
Teresa Utterback,
Tamara Feldblyum,
Victoria Zismann,
Stacey E. Iobst,
Joseph Hsiao,
Aymeric R. de Vazeille,
Steven L. Salzberg,
Owen White,
Claire M. Fraser,
Yeisoo Yu,
HeyRan Kim,
Teri Rambo,
Jennifer Currie,
Kristi Collura,
Shelly Kernodle-Thompson,
Fusheng Wei,
Kudrna Kudrna,
Jetty S. S. Ammiraju,
Meizhong Luo,
José Luis Goicoechea,
Rod A. Wing,
David C Henry,
Robert D. Oates,
Michael Palmer,
Gina L Pries,
Christopher Saski,
Jessica Simmons,
Carol Soderlund,
William M. Nelson,
M. de la Bastide,
Lori Spiegel,
Lidia U. Nascimento,
Emily Huang,
Raymond Preston,
Theresa Zutavern,
Lance E. Palmer,
Andrew O’Shaughnessy,
Sujit Dike,
W. Richard McCombie,
Pat Minx,
Holland S. Cordum,
Richard K. Wilson,
Weiwei Jin,
Hyeran Lee,
Jiming Jiang,
Scott A. Jackson
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
genome research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.556
H-Index - 297
eISSN - 1549-5469
pISSN - 1088-9051
DOI - 10.1101/gr.3869505
Subject(s) - synteny , biology , genetics , genome , comparative genomics , chromosome , oryza sativa , gene , bacterial artificial chromosome , expressed sequence tag , transposable element , genomics
Rice (Oryza sativa L.) chromosome 3 is evolutionarily conserved across the cultivated cereals and shares large blocks of synteny with maize and sorghum, which diverged from rice more than 50 million years ago. To begin to completely understand this chromosome, we sequenced, finished, and annotated 36.1 Mb ( approximately 97%) from O. sativa subsp. japonica cv Nipponbare. Annotation features of the chromosome include 5915 genes, of which 913 are related to transposable elements. A putative function could be assigned to 3064 genes, with another 757 genes annotated as expressed, leaving 2094 that encode hypothetical proteins. Similarity searches against the proteome of Arabidopsis thaliana revealed putative homologs for 67% of the chromosome 3 proteins. Further searches of a nonredundant amino acid database, the Pfam domain database, plant Expressed Sequence Tags, and genomic assemblies from sorghum and maize revealed only 853 nontransposable element related proteins from chromosome 3 that lacked similarity to other known sequences. Interestingly, 426 of these have a paralog within the rice genome. A comparative physical map of the wild progenitor species, Oryza nivara, with japonica chromosome 3 revealed a high degree of sequence identity and synteny between these two species, which diverged approximately 10,000 years ago. Although no major rearrangements were detected, the deduced size of the O. nivara chromosome 3 was 21% smaller than that of japonica. Synteny between rice and other cereals using an integrated maize physical map and wheat genetic map was strikingly high, further supporting the use of rice and, in particular, chromosome 3, as a model for comparative studies among the cereals.
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