Development and bin mapping of a Rosaceae Conserved Ortholog Set (COS) of markers.

Publication Overview
TitleDevelopment and bin mapping of a Rosaceae Conserved Ortholog Set (COS) of markers
AuthorsCabrera A, Kozik A, Howad W, Arus P, Iezzoni AF, van der Knaap E
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC genomics
Volume10
Year2009
Page(s)562
CitationCabrera A, Kozik A, Howad W, Arus P, Iezzoni AF, van der Knaap E. Development and bin mapping of a Rosaceae Conserved Ortholog Set (COS) of markers. BMC genomics. 2009; 10:562.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Detailed comparative genome analyses within the economically important Rosaceae family have not been conducted. This is largely due to the lack of conserved gene-based molecular markers that are transferable among the important crop genera within the family [e.g. Malus (apple), Fragaria (strawberry), and Prunus (peach, cherry, apricot and almond)]. The lack of molecular markers and comparative whole genome sequence analysis for this family severely hampers crop improvement efforts as well as QTL confirmation and validation studies.

RESULTS
We identified a set of 3,818 rosaceaous unigenes comprised of two or more ESTs that correspond to single copy Arabidopsis genes. From this Rosaceae Conserved Orthologous Set (RosCOS), 1039 were selected from which 857 were used for the development of intron-flanking primers and allele amplification. This led to successful amplification and subsequent mapping of 613 RosCOS onto the Prunus TxE reference map resulting in a genome-wide coverage of 0.67 to 1.06 gene-based markers per cM per linkage group. Furthermore, the RosCOS primers showed amplification success rates from 23 to 100% across the family indicating that a substantial part of the RosCOS primers can be directly employed in other less studied rosaceaous crops. Comparisons of the genetic map positions of the RosCOS with the physical locations of the orthologs in the Populus trichocarpa genome identified regions of colinearity between the genomes of Prunus-Rosaceae and Populus-Salicaceae.

CONCLUSION
Conserved orthologous genes are extremely useful for the analysis of genome evolution among closely and distantly related species. The results presented in this study demonstrate the considerable potential of the mapped Prunus RosCOS for genome-wide marker employment and comparative whole genome studies within the Rosaceae family. Moreover, these markers will also function as useful anchor points for the genome sequencing efforts currently ongoing in this family as well as for comparative QTL analyses.

Features
This publication contains information about 1,716 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
RosCOS_2387RosCOS_2387genetic_marker
RosCOS_2388RosCOS_2388genetic_marker
RosCOS_2389RosCOS_2389genetic_marker
RosCOS_2390RosCOS_2390genetic_marker
RosCOS_2406RosCOS_2406genetic_marker
RosCOS_2408RosCOS_2408genetic_marker
RosCOS_2409RosCOS_2409genetic_marker
RosCOS_2410RosCOS_2410genetic_marker
RosCOS_2411RosCOS_2411genetic_marker
RosCOS_2439RosCOS_2439genetic_marker
RosCOS_2440RosCOS_2440genetic_marker
RosCOS_2446RosCOS_2446genetic_marker
RosCOS_2448RosCOS_2448genetic_marker
RosCOS_2455RosCOS_2455genetic_marker
RosCOS_2457RosCOS_2457genetic_marker
RosCOS_246RosCOS_246genetic_marker
RosCOS_2486RosCOS_2486genetic_marker
RosCOS_2508RosCOS_2508genetic_marker
RosCOS_2522RosCOS_2522genetic_marker
RosCOS_2528RosCOS_2528genetic_marker
RosCOS_2568RosCOS_2568genetic_marker
RosCOS_2570RosCOS_2570genetic_marker
RosCOS_2573RosCOS_2573genetic_marker
RosCOS_2574RosCOS_2574genetic_marker
RosCOS_2575RosCOS_2575genetic_marker

Pages