High-throughput SNP genotyping in the highly heterozygous genome of <it>Eucalyptus</it>: assay success, polymorphism and transferability across species

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>High-throughput SNP genotyping has become an essential requirement for molecular breeding and population genomics studies in plant species. Large scale SNP developments have been reported for several mainstream crops. A growing inter...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: de Lima Bruno, Kirst Matias, Silva-Junior Orzenil B, Grattapaglia Dario, Faria Danielle A, Pappas Georgios J
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2011-04-01
Series:BMC Plant Biology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2229/11/65
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Summary:<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>High-throughput SNP genotyping has become an essential requirement for molecular breeding and population genomics studies in plant species. Large scale SNP developments have been reported for several mainstream crops. A growing interest now exists to expand the speed and resolution of genetic analysis to outbred species with highly heterozygous genomes. When nucleotide diversity is high, a refined diagnosis of the target SNP sequence context is needed to convert queried SNPs into high-quality genotypes using the Golden Gate Genotyping Technology (GGGT). This issue becomes exacerbated when attempting to transfer SNPs across species, a scarcely explored topic in plants, and likely to become significant for population genomics and inter specific breeding applications in less domesticated and less funded plant genera.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We have successfully developed the first set of 768 SNPs assayed by the GGGT for the highly heterozygous genome of <it>Eucalyptus </it>from a mixed Sanger/454 database with 1,164,695 ESTs and the preliminary 4.5X draft genome sequence for <it>E. grandis</it>. A systematic assessment of <it>in silico </it>SNP filtering requirements showed that stringent constraints on the SNP surrounding sequences have a significant impact on SNP genotyping performance and polymorphism. SNP assay success was high for the 288 SNPs selected with more rigorous <it>in silico </it>constraints; 93% of them provided high quality genotype calls and 71% of them were polymorphic in a diverse panel of 96 individuals of five different species.</p> <p>SNP reliability was high across nine <it>Eucalyptus </it>species belonging to three sections within subgenus Symphomyrtus and still satisfactory across species of two additional subgenera, although polymorphism declined as phylogenetic distance increased.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>This study indicates that the GGGT performs well both within and across species of <it>Eucalyptus </it>notwithstanding its nucleotide diversity ≥2%. The development of a much larger array of informative SNPs across multiple <it>Eucalyptus </it>species is feasible, although strongly dependent on having a representative and sufficiently deep collection of sequences from many individuals of each target species. A higher density SNP platform will be instrumental to undertake genome-wide phylogenetic and population genomics studies and to implement molecular breeding by Genomic Selection in <it>Eucalyptus</it>.</p>
ISSN:1471-2229