15 research outputs found

    Interest of Genotyping-by-Sequencing technologies as an alternative to low density SNP chips for genomic selection in layer chicken

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    To reduce the cost of genomic selection, low density SNP chip can be used in combination with imputation for genotyping the selection candidates instead of using high density (HD) SNP chip. Concurrently, next-generation sequencing (NGS) techniques has been increasingly used in livestock species but remain expensive to be routinely used in selection. An alternative and costefficient solution is the Genotyping by Genome Reducing and Sequencing (GGRS) techniques to sequence only a fraction of the genome by using restriction enzymes. This approach was simulated from sequences of 1027 individuals in a pure layer line, using four enzymes (EcoRI, TaqI, AvaII and PstI). Imputation accuracy on HD genotypes was assessed as the mean correlation between true and imputed genotypes. Egg weight, egg shell color, egg shell strength and albumen height were evaluated with single-step GBLUP methodology. The impact of imputation errors on the genomic estimated breeding values (GEBV) was also investigated.AvaII or PstI led to the detection of more than 10K SNPs in common with the HD SNP chip resulting in imputation accuracy higher than 0.97. The impact of imputation errors on the ranking of the selection candidates was reduced with Spearman correlation (between GEBV calculated on true and imputed genotypes) higher than 0.97 for AvaII and PstI. Finally, the GGRS approach can be an interesting alternative to low density SNP chip for genomic selection. However, with real data, heterogeneity between individuals with missing data has to be taken into account

    De <i>novo </i>transcriptomes of 14 gammarid individuals for proteogenomic analysis of seven taxonomic groups

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    Gammarids are amphipods found worldwide distributed in fresh and marine waters. They play an important role in aquatic ecosystems and are well established sentinel species in ecotoxicology. In this study, we sequenced the transcriptomes of a male individual and a female individual for seven different taxonomic groups belonging to the two genera Gammarus and Echinogammarus: Gammarus fossarum A, G. fossarum B, G. fossarum C, Gammarus wautieri, Gammarus pulex, Echinogammarus berilloni, and Echinogammarus marinus. These taxa were chosen to explore the molecular diversity of transcribed genes of genotyped individuals from these groups. Transcriptomes were de novo assembled and annotated. High-quality assembly was confirmed by BUSCO comparison against the Arthropod dataset. The 14 RNA-Seq-derived protein sequence databases proposed here will be a significant resource for proteogenomics studies of these ecotoxicologically relevant non-model organisms. These transcriptomes represent reliable reference sequences for whole-transcriptome and proteome studies on other gammarids, for primer design to clone specific genes or monitor their specific expression, and for analyses of molecular differences between gammarid species

    Transcriptomes de novo transcriptomes de 14 gammaridae pour analyse proteogenomique de 7 groupes taxonomiques

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    International audienceGammarids are amphipods found worldwide distributed in fresh and marine waters. They play an important role in aquatic ecosystems and are well established sentinel species in ecotoxicology. In this study, we sequenced the transcriptomes of a male individual and a female individual for seven different taxonomic groups belonging to the two genera Gammarus and Echinogammarus: Gammarus fossarum A, G. fossarum B, G. fossarum C, Gammarus wautieri, Gammarus pulex, Echinogammarus berilloni, and Echinogammarus marinus. These taxa were chosen to explore the molecular diversity of transcribed genes of genotyped individuals from these groups. Transcriptomes were de novo assembled and annotated. High-quality assembly was confirmed by BUSCO comparison against the Arthropod dataset. The 14 RNA-Seq-derived protein sequence databases proposed here will be a significant resource for proteogenomics studies of these ecotoxicologically relevant non-model organisms. These transcriptomes represent reliable reference sequences for whole-transcriptome and proteome studies on other gammarids, for primer design to clone specific genes or monitor their specific expression, and for analyses of molecular differences between gammarid species

    Biological rhythms in the deep-sea hydrothermal mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus

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    Biological rhythms are a fundamental property of life. The deep ocean covers 66% of our planet surface and is one of the largest biomes. The deep sea has long been considered as an arrhythmic environment because sunlight is totally absent below 1,000 m depth. In the present study, we have sequenced the temporal transcriptomes of a deep-sea species, the ecosystem-structuring vent mussel Bathymodiolus azoricus. We reveal that tidal cycles predominate in the transcriptome and physiology of mussels fixed directly at hydrothermal vents at 1,688 m depth at the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, whereas daily cycles prevail in mussels sampled after laboratory acclimation. We identify B. azoricus canonical circadian clock genes, and show that oscillations observed in deep-sea mussels could be either a direct response to environmental stimulus, or be driven endogenously by one or more biological clocks. This work generates in situ insights into temporal organisation in a deep-sea organism

    De novo assembly of 90 bovines genomes using PacBio CLR application comparison and optimization

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    International audienceGeT-PlaGe is a genomic core facility which provides access to technologies and expertise in genome sequencing to academic and private research teams. The SeqOccIn (Sequencing Occitanie Innovation) project, managed by Get-PlaGe and Genotoul Bioinfo platforms, was selected by the Occitanie Region as part of the call for projects "Regional Research and Innovation Platforms". The main objective is to acquire expertise on the optimal combination of long fragment sequencing technologies and associated applications to better characterize complex genomes in the agronomical field: from SNP and structural variation detection, to high quality assembly production.These approaches have allowed to assemble a novel high quality bovine reference genome. We chose to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms and structural variants (insertions and deletions) by comparing multiple assemblies. A preliminary study done on a heifer (37160) showed that long-reads sequencing is the most suitable solution for structural variations detection. We sequenced 154 bulls from 14 breeds with PacBio Sequel II Continuous Long-Read (CLR). Here we present assembly as well as variation detection results for 90 bulls from 11 breeds (9 Abondances, 7 Aubracs, 4 Blondes d’Aquitaine, 3 Charolaises, 14 Holsteins, 11 Limousines, 19 Montbeliardes, 14 Normandes, 3 Rouges Flamandes, 2 Tarentaises and 4 Vosgiennes

    A Bos taurus sequencing methods benchmark for assembly, haplotyping, and variant calling

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    Abstract Inspired by the production of reference data sets in the Genome in a Bottle project, we sequenced one Charolais heifer with different technologies: Illumina paired-end, Oxford Nanopore, Pacific Biosciences (HiFi and CLR), 10X Genomics linked-reads, and Hi-C. In order to generate haplotypic assemblies, we also sequenced both parents with short reads. From these data, we built two haplotyped trio high quality reference genomes and a consensus assembly, using up-to-date software packages. The assemblies obtained using PacBio HiFi reaches a size of 3.2 Gb, which is significantly larger than the 2.7 Gb ARS-UCD1.2 reference. The BUSCO score of the consensus assembly reaches a completeness of 95.8%, among highly conserved mammal genes. We also identified 35,866 structural variants larger than 50 base pairs. This assembly is a contribution to the bovine pangenome for the “Charolais” breed. These datasets will prove to be useful resources enabling the community to gain additional insight on sequencing technologies for applications such as SNP, indel or structural variant calling, and de novo assembly
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