Complexity reduction of polymorphic sequences (CRoPS): a novel approach for large-scale polymorphism discovery in complex genomes

Application of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) is revolutionizing human bio-medical research. However, discovery of polymorphisms in low polymorphic species is still a challenging and costly endeavor, despite widespread availability of Sanger sequencing technology. We present CRoPS as a novel...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2007-11, Vol.2 (11), p.e1172-e1172
Hauptverfasser: van Orsouw, Nathalie J, Hogers, René C J, Janssen, Antoine, Yalcin, Feyruz, Snoeijers, Sandor, Verstege, Esther, Schneiders, Harrie, van der Poel, Hein, van Oeveren, Jan, Verstegen, Harold, van Eijk, Michiel J T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Application of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) is revolutionizing human bio-medical research. However, discovery of polymorphisms in low polymorphic species is still a challenging and costly endeavor, despite widespread availability of Sanger sequencing technology. We present CRoPS as a novel approach for polymorphism discovery by combining the power of reproducible genome complexity reduction of AFLP with Genome Sequencer (GS) 20/GS FLX next-generation sequencing technology. With CRoPS, hundreds-of-thousands of sequence reads derived from complexity-reduced genome sequences of two or more samples are processed and mined for SNPs using a fully-automated bioinformatics pipeline. We show that over 75% of putative maize SNPs discovered using CRoPS are successfully converted to SNPWave assays, confirming them to be true SNPs derived from unique (single-copy) genome sequences. By using CRoPS, polymorphism discovery will become affordable in organisms with high levels of repetitive DNA in the genome and/or low levels of polymorphism in the (breeding) germplasm without the need for prior sequence information.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0001172