4.8 Article

Multiplex sequencing of plant chloroplast genomes using Solexa sequencing-by-synthesis technology

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 36, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkn502

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [ATOL-0629508, DEB-0317103]
  2. Oregon State University College of Science
  3. Oregon State University College of Agriculture
  4. US Forest Service Pacific Northwest Research Station

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Organellar DNA sequences are widely used in evolutionary and population genetic studies, however, the conservative nature of chloroplast gene and genome evolution often limits phylogenetic resolution and statistical power. To gain maximal access to the historical record contained within chloroplast genomes, we have adapted multiplex sequencing-by-synthesis (MSBS) to simultaneously sequence multiple genomes using the Illumina Genome Analyzer. We PCR-amplified 120 kb plastomes from eight species (seven Pinus, one Picea) in 35 reactions. Pooled products were ligated to modified adapters that included 3 bp indexing tags and samples were multiplexed at four genomes per lane. Tagged microreads were assembled by de novo and reference-guided assembly methods, using previously published Pinus plastomes as surrogate references. Assemblies for these eight genomes are estimated at 8894 complete, with an average sequence depth of 55 to 186. Mononucleotide repeats interrupt contig assembly with increasing repeat length, and we estimate that the limit for their assembly is 16 bp. Comparisons to 37 kb of Sanger sequence show a validated error rate of 0.056, and conspicuous errors are evident from the assembly process. This efficient sequencing approach yields high-quality draft genomes and should have immediate applicability to genomes with comparable complexity.

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