Abstract
Background: To date, exon capture has largely been restricted to species with fully sequenced genomes, which has precluded its application to lineages that lack high quality genomic resources. We developed a novel strategy for designing array-based exon capture in chipmunks (Tamias) based on de novo transcriptome assemblies. We evaluated the performance of our approach across specimens from four chipmunk species.Results: We selectively targeted 11,975 exons (~4 Mb) on custom capture arrays, and enriched over 99% of the targets in all libraries. The percentage of aligned reads was highly consistent (24.4-29.1%) across all specimens, including in multiplexing up to 20 barcoded individuals on a single array. Base coverage among specimens and within targets in each species library was uniform, and the performance of targets among independent exon captures was highly reproducible. There was no decrease in coverage among chipmunk species, which showed up to 1.5% sequence divergence in coding regions. We did observe a decline in capture performance of a subset of targets designed from a much more divergent ground squirrel genome (30 My), however, over 90% of the targets were also recovered. Final assemblies yielded over ten thousand orthologous loci (~3.6 Mb) with thousands of fixed and polymorphic SNPs among species identified.Conclusions: Our study demonstrates the potential of a transcriptome-enabled, multiplexed, exon capture method to create thousands of informative markers for population genomic and phylogenetic studies in non-model species across the tree of life.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 403 |
| Journal | BMC Genomics |
| Volume | 13 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 17 2012 |
Funding
The authors would like to thank Chris Conroy, John Demboski, Hopi Hoekstra, Eileen Lacey, Hillery Metz, James Patton, Karen Rowe, Kevin Rowe and Jack Sullivan for providing specimens, Hernán Burbano for sharing scripts for array design, and Brice Sarver for providing Tamias mitochondrial sequence. We also thank the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at the University of Texas at Austin for providing computational support. We would also like to acknowledge the Moritz lab group for their insightful comments on this manuscript. This work was supported by an NSERC postdoctoral fellowship (KB), University of Montana start-up funds (JG), and University of California Berkeley VCR-BiGCB and the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (CM).
Keywords
- Microarray-based exon capture
- Phylogenetics
- Population genomics
- SNP identification
- Tamias
- Target enrichment