Resistance gene enrichment sequencing (RenSeq) enables reannotation of the NB-LRR gene family from sequenced plant genomes and rapid mapping of resistance loci in segregating populations
Jupe, Florian and Witek, Kamil and Verweij, Walter and Śliwka, Jadwiga and Pritchard, Leighton and Etherington, Graham J. and Maclean, Dan and Cock, Peter J. and Leggett, Richard M. and Bryan, Glenn J. and Cardle, Linda and Hein, Ingo and Jones, Jonathan D.G. (2013) Resistance gene enrichment sequencing (RenSeq) enables reannotation of the NB-LRR gene family from sequenced plant genomes and rapid mapping of resistance loci in segregating populations. Plant Journal, 76 (3). pp. 530-544. ISSN 0960-7412 (https://doi.org/10.1111/tpj.12307)
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Abstract
RenSeq is a NB-LRR (nucleotide binding-site leucine-rich repeat) gene-targeted, Resistance gene enrichment and sequencing method that enables discovery and annotation of pathogen resistance gene family members in plant genome sequences. We successfully applied RenSeq to the sequenced potato Solanum tuberosum clone DM, and increased the number of identified NB-LRRs from 438 to 755. The majority of these identified R gene loci reside in poorly or previously unannotated regions of the genome. Sequence and positional details on the 12 chromosomes have been established for 704 NB-LRRs and can be accessed through a genome browser that we provide. We compared these NB-LRR genes and the corresponding oligonucleotide baits with the highest sequence similarity and demonstrated that ~80% sequence identity is sufficient for enrichment. Analysis of the sequenced tomato S. lycopersicum 'Heinz 1706' extended the NB-LRR complement to 394 loci. We further describe a methodology that applies RenSeq to rapidly identify molecular markers that co-segregate with a pathogen resistance trait of interest. In two independent segregating populations involving the wild Solanum species S. berthaultii (Rpi-ber2) and S. ruiz-ceballosii (Rpi-rzc1), we were able to apply RenSeq successfully to identify markers that co-segregate with resistance towards the late blight pathogen Phytophthora infestans. These SNP identification workflows were designed as easy-to-adapt Galaxy pipelines.
ORCID iDs
Jupe, Florian, Witek, Kamil, Verweij, Walter, Śliwka, Jadwiga, Pritchard, Leighton ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8392-2822, Etherington, Graham J., Maclean, Dan, Cock, Peter J. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9513-9993, Leggett, Richard M., Bryan, Glenn J., Cardle, Linda, Hein, Ingo and Jones, Jonathan D.G.;-
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Item type: Article ID code: 70424 Dates: DateEvent30 November 2013Published8 October 2013Published Online6 August 2013AcceptedSubjects: Agriculture > Plant culture
Science > MicrobiologyDepartment: Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical Sciences Depositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 05 Nov 2019 11:50 Last modified: 18 Nov 2024 09:14 Related URLs: URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/70424