4.7 Article

ORTHOSKIM: In silico sequence capture from genomic and transcriptomic libraries for phylogenomic and barcoding applications

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES
Volume 22, Issue 5, Pages 2018-2037

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1755-0998.13584

Keywords

bioinformatics; Ericales; genome skimming; mitochondrion; nucleus; phylogenomic; plastome; transcriptome

Funding

  1. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-10-INBS-09-08, ANR-16-CE93-0004]
  2. Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Forderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung [SNF-310030L_170059]
  3. Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre [14-14, 70184209]
  4. Norges Forskningsrad [226134/F50, 250963/F20]

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Low-coverage whole genome shotgun sequencing is a cost-effective method for acquiring genomic data in nonmodel organisms. In this study, a pipeline called ORTHOSKIM is introduced, which captures targeted sequences from genomic and transcriptomic libraries without assembling whole organelle genomes. ORTHOSKIM successfully recovered cpDNA, mtDNA, and rDNA sequences in plant families Primulaceae and Ericaceae.
Low-coverage whole genome shotgun sequencing (or genome skimming) has emerged as a cost-effective method for acquiring genomic data in nonmodel organisms. This method provides sequence information on chloroplast genome (cpDNA), mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) and nuclear ribosomal regions (rDNA), which are over-represented within cells. However, numerous bioinformatic challenges remain to accurately and rapidly obtain such data in organisms with complex genomic structures and rearrangements, in particular for mtDNA in plants or for cpDNA in some plant families. Here we introduce the pipeline ORTHOSKIM, which performs in silico capture of targeted sequences from genomic and transcriptomic libraries without assembling whole organelle genomes. ORTHOSKIM proceeds in three steps: (i) global sequence assembly, (ii) mapping against reference sequences and (iii) target sequence extraction; importantly it also includes a range of quality control tests. Different modes are implemented to capture both coding and noncoding regions of cpDNA, mtDNA and rDNA sequences, along with predefined nuclear sequences (e.g., ultraconserved elements) or collections of single-copy orthologue genes. Moreover, aligned DNA matrices are produced for phylogenetic reconstructions, by performing multiple alignments of the captured sequences. While ORTHOSKIM is suitable for any eukaryote, a case study is presented here, using 114 genome-skimming libraries and four RNA sequencing libraries obtained for two plant families, Primulaceae and Ericaceae, the latter being a well-known problematic family for cpDNA assemblies. ORTHOSKIM recovered with high success rates cpDNA, mtDNA and rDNA sequences, well suited to accurately infer evolutionary relationships within these families. ORTHOSKIM is released under a GPL-3 licence and is available at: .

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