A global assembly of cotton ESTs
Author(s) -
Joshua A. Udall,
Jordan M Swanson,
Karl Haller,
Ryan A. Rapp,
Michael E. Sparks,
Jamie Hatfield,
Yeisoo Yu,
Yingru Wu,
Caitriona Dowd,
Alaaddin Bulak Arpat,
Brad Sickler,
Thea A. Wilkins,
Jin Ying Guo,
XiaoYa Chen,
Jodi Scheffler,
Earl Taliercio,
Rickie B. Turley,
Helen McFadden,
Paxton Payton,
Natalya Klueva,
Randell Allen,
Deshui Zhang,
Candace H. Haigler,
Curtis G. Wilkerson,
Jinfeng Suo,
Stefan Schulze,
Margaret L. Pierce,
Margaret Essenberg,
HyeRan Kim,
Danny Llewellyn,
Elizabeth S. Dennis,
David Kudrna,
Rod A. Wing,
Andrew H. Paterson,
Cari Soderlund,
Jonathan F. Wendel
Publication year - 2006
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.4602906
Subject(s) - biology , gossypium barbadense , genome , gossypium , expressed sequence tag , contig , ploidy , genetics , genomics , gene , uniprot , computational biology
Approximately 185,000 Gossypium EST sequences comprising >94,800,000 nucleotides were amassed from 30 cDNA libraries constructed from a variety of tissues and organs under a range of conditions, including drought stress and pathogen challenges. These libraries were derived from allopolyploid cotton (Gossypium hirsutum; A(T) and D(T) genomes) as well as its two diploid progenitors, Gossypium arboreum (A genome) and Gossypium raimondii (D genome). ESTs were assembled using the Program for Assembling and Viewing ESTs (PAVE), resulting in 22,030 contigs and 29,077 singletons (51,107 unigenes). Further comparisons among the singletons and contigs led to recognition of 33,665 exemplar sequences that represent a nonredundant set of putative Gossypium genes containing partial or full-length coding regions and usually one or two UTRs. The assembly, along with their UniProt BLASTX hits, GO annotation, and Pfam analysis results, are freely accessible as a public resource for cotton genomics. Because ESTs from diploid and allotetraploid Gossypium were combined in a single assembly, we were in many cases able to bioinformatically distinguish duplicated genes in allotetraploid cotton and assign them to either the A or D genome. The assembly and associated information provide a framework for future investigation of cotton functional and evolutionary genomics.
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