Abstract

BackgroundRye (Secale cereale L.) belongs to tribe Triticeae and is an important temperate cereal. It is one of the parents of man-made species Triticale and has been used as a source of agronomically important genes for wheat improvement. The short arm of rye chromosome 1 (1RS), in particular is rich in useful genes, and as it may increase yield, protein content and resistance to biotic and abiotic stress, it has been introgressed into wheat as the 1BL.1RS translocation. A better knowledge of the rye genome could facilitate rye improvement and increase the efficiency of utilizing rye genes in wheat breeding.ResultsHere, we report on BAC end sequencing of 1,536 clones from two 1RS-specific BAC libraries. We obtained 2,778 (90.4%) useful sequences with a cumulative length of 2,032,538 bp and an average read length of 732 bp. These sequences represent 0.5% of 1RS arm. The GC content of the sequenced fraction of 1RS is 45.9%, and at least 84% of the 1RS arm consists of repetitive DNA. We identified transposable element junctions in BESs and developed insertion site based polymorphism markers (ISBP). Out of the 64 primer pairs tested, 17 (26.6%) were specific for 1RS. We also identified BESs carrying microsatellites suitable for development of 1RS-specific SSR markers.ConclusionThis work demonstrates the utility of chromosome arm-specific BAC libraries for targeted analysis of large Triticeae genomes and provides new sequence data from the rye genome and molecular markers for the short arm of rye chromosome 1.

Highlights

  • Rye (Secale cereale L.) belongs to tribe Triticeae and is an important temperate cereal

  • We demonstrate that the combination of chromosome arm-specific bacterial artifical chromosome (BAC) library with BAC end sequencing technology offers a cost efficient strategy to survey the composition of the rye genome and saturate chromosome short arm of rye chromosome 1 (1RS) with molecular markers

  • BAC end sequencing and sequence trimming Four 384-well plates originating from two BAC libraries specific for rye chromosome arm 1RS were chosen to provide a uniform and random sample of 1RS

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Summary

Introduction

Rye (Secale cereale L.) belongs to tribe Triticeae and is an important temperate cereal. It is one of the parents of man-made species Triticale and has been used as a source of agronomically important genes for wheat improvement. The short arm of rye chromosome 1 (1RS), in particular is rich in useful genes, and as it may increase yield, protein content and resistance to biotic and abiotic stress, it has been introgressed into wheat as the 1BL.1RS translocation. Besides its importance as a crop, rye is one of the parents of a man-made species Triticale and the short arm of rye chromosome 1 (1RS) has been introgressed into several hundreds of wheat cultivars [1,2]. It would be of great advantage to isolate those genes individually through map-based cloning and develop markers for marker assisted selection in rye and wheat

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