4.7 Article

Structural characterization of Brachypodium genome and its syntenic relationship with rice and wheat

Journal

PLANT MOLECULAR BIOLOGY
Volume 70, Issue 1-2, Pages 47-61

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11103-009-9456-3

Keywords

Brachypodium distachyon; Comparative genomics; Gene density; Colinearity; Repetitive DNA elements; Genome evolution

Funding

  1. United State Department of Agriculture, Agriculture Research Service CRIS [532502100-000, 532502100-011, 532521000-13]

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Brachypodium distachyon (Brachypodium) has been recently recognized as an emerging model system for both comparative and functional genomics in grass species. In this study, 55,221 repeat masked Brachypodium BAC end sequences (BES) were used for comparative analysis against the 12 rice pseudomolecules. The analysis revealed that similar to 26.4% of BES have significant matches with the rice genome and 82.4% of the matches were homologous to known genes. Further analysis of paired-end BES and similar to 1.0 Mb sequences from nine selected BACs proved to be useful in revealing conserved regions and regions that have undergone considerable genomic changes. Differential gene amplification, insertions/deletions and inversions appeared to be the common evolutionary events that caused variations of microcolinearity at different orthologous genomic regions. It was found that similar to 17% of genes in the two genomes are not colinear in the orthologous regions. Analysis of BAC sequences also revealed higher gene density (similar to 9 kb/gene) and lower repeat DNA content (similar to 13.1%) in Brachypodium when compared to the orthologous rice regions, consistent with the smaller size of the Brachypodium genome. The 119 annotated Brachypodium genes were BLASTN compared against the wheat EST database and deletion bin mapped wheat ESTs. About 77% of the genes retrieved significant matches in the EST database, while 9.2% matched to the bin mapped ESTs. In some cases, genes in single Brachypodium BACs matched to multiple ESTs that were mapped to the same deletion bins, suggesting that the Brachypodium genome will be useful for ordering wheat ESTs within the deletion bins and developing specific markers at targeted regions in the wheat genome.

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