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Genome sequencing of ion-beam-induced mutants facilitates detection of candidate genes responsible for phenotypes of mutants in rice

Authors :
Hiroyuki Ichida
Shigeki Nozawa
Yutaka Oono
Tomoko Abe
Hiroshi Kato
Akemi Shimizu
Yoshihiro Hase
Ryouhei Morita
Katsuya Satoh
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

Ion beams are physical mutagens used for plant and microbe breeding that cause mutations via a distinct mechanism from those of chemical mutagens or gamma rays. We utilized whole-exome sequencing of rice DNA in order to understand the properties of ion beam-induced mutations in a genome-wide manner. DNA libraries were constructed from selected carbon-ion-beam-induced rice mutants by capturing with a custom probes covering 66.3 M bases of nearly all exons and miRNAs predicted in the genome. A total of 56 mutations, including 24 single nucleotide variations, 23 deletions, and 5 insertions, were detected in five mutant rice lines (two dwarf and three early-heading-date mutants). The mutations were distributed among all 12 chromosomes, and the average mutation frequency in the M1 generation was estimated to be 2.7 × 10-7per base. Many single base insertions and deletions were associated with homopolymeric repeats, whereas larger deletions up to seven base pairs were observed at polynucleotide repeats in the DNA sequences of the mutation sites. Of the 56 mutations, six were classified as high-impact mutations that caused a frame shift or loss of exons. A gene that was functionally related to the phenotype of the mutant was disrupted by a high-impact mutation in four of the five lines tested, suggesting that whole-exome sequencing of ion-beam-irradiated mutants could facilitate the detection of candidate genes responsible for the mutant phenotypes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6db79cc923d2862b5907009c02ddeb0a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/666677