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Finding the missing honey bee genes: lessons learned from a genome upgrade

Authors :
Jennifer M. Tsuruda
Radhika S. Khetani
Leonard J. Foster
Christine G. Elsik
Bart Devreese
Jian Ma
Eckart Stolle
Hugh M. Robertson
Lan Zhang
Roderic Guigó
Jay D. Evans
Ryszard Maleszka
Evgeny M. Zdobnov
Jixin Deng
Greg J. Hunt
Vandita Joshi
Peter Kosarev
Richard A. Gibbs
Christopher P. Childers
Matthias Van Vaerenbergh
Michael Holder
Irene Newsham
Dan Graur
Victor V. Solovyev
Yuanqing Wu
Christie Kovar
Gene E. Robinson
Olav Rueppell
Dirk C. de Graaf
Robert M. Waterhouse
Griet Debyser
Monica Munoz-Torres
Huaiyang Jiang
Terence Murphy
Mario Stanke
Justin T. Reese
Martin Beye
Daniel B. Weaver
Charles W. Whitfield
Francisco Camara
Kim C. Worley
Matthew E. Hudson
Anna K. Bennett
Donna M. Muzny
Katharina J. Hoff
Eran Elhaik
Dianhui Zhu
Robin F. A. Moritz
Source :
BMC Genomics, Vol. 15 (2014) P. 86, BMC GENOMICS, BMC genomics, BMC Genomics
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Background: The first generation of genome sequence assemblies and annotations have had a significant impact upon our understanding of the biology of the sequenced species, the phylogenetic relationships among species, the study of populations within and across species, and have informed the biology of humans. As only a few Metazoan genomes are approaching finished quality (human, mouse, fly and worm), there is room for improvement of most genome assemblies. The honey bee (Apis mellifera) genome, published in 2006, was noted for its bimodal GC content distribution that affected the quality of the assembly in some regions and for fewer genes in the initial gene set (OGSv1.0) compared to what would be expected based on other sequenced insect genomes. Results: Here, we report an improved honey bee genome assembly (Amel_4.5) with a new gene annotation set (OGSv3.2), and show that the honey bee genome contains a number of genes similar to that of other insect genomes, contrary to what was suggested in OGSv1.0. The new genome assembly is more contiguous and complete and the new gene set includes 5000 more protein-coding genes, 50% more than previously reported. About 1/6 of the additional genes were due to improvements to the assembly, and the remaining were inferred based on new RNAseq and protein data. Conclusions: Lessons learned from this genome upgrade have important implications for future genome sequencing projects. Furthermore, the improvements significantly enhance genomic resources for the honey bee, a key model for social behavior and essential to global ecology through pollination. Funding for the project was provided by a grant to RG from the National Human Genome Research Institute, National Institutes of Health (NHGRI, NIH) U54 HG003273. Contributions from members of the CGE lab were supported by Agriculture and Food Research Initiative Competitive grant no. 2010-65205-20407 from the USDA National Institute of Food Agriculture. AKB was supported by a Clare Luce Booth Fellowship at Georgetown University

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712164
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Genomics, Vol. 15 (2014) P. 86, BMC GENOMICS, BMC genomics, BMC Genomics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cd15637d0865f171a92767ed87591067