PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Approaches to variant discovery for conifer transcriptome sequencing.

  • Emily Telfer,
  • Natalie Graham,
  • Lucy Macdonald,
  • Shane Sturrock,
  • Phillip Wilcox,
  • Lisa Stanbra

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0205835
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 11
p. e0205835

Abstract

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There is a wide diversity of bioinformatic tools available for the assembly of next generation sequence and subsequence variant calling to identify genetic markers at scale. Integration of genomics tools such as genomic selection, association studies, pedigree analysis and analysis of genetic diversity, into operational breeding is a goal for New Zealand's most widely planted exotic tree species, Pinus radiata. In the absence of full reference genomes for large megagenomes such as in conifers, RNA sequencing in a range of genotypes and tissue types, offers a rich source of genetic markers for downstream application. We compared nine different assembler and variant calling software combinations in a single transcriptomic library and found that Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNPs) discovery could vary by as much as an order of magnitude (8,061 SNPs up to 86,815 SNPs). The assembler with the best realignment of the packages trialled, Trinity, in combination with several variant callers was then applied to a much larger multi-genotype, multi-tissue transcriptome and identified 683,135 in silico SNPs across a predicted 449,951 exons when mapped to the Pinus taeda ver 1.01e reference.