Abstract

BackgroundBread wheat has a large complex genome that makes whole genome resequencing costly. Therefore, genome complexity reduction techniques such as sequence capture make re-sequencing cost effective. With a high-quality draft wheat genome now available it is possible to design capture probe sets and to use them to accurately genotype and anchor SNPs to the genome. Furthermore, in addition to genetic variation, epigenetic variation provides a source of natural variation contributing to changes in gene expression and phenotype that can be profiled at the base pair level using sequence capture coupled with bisulphite treatment. Here, we present a new 12 Mbp wheat capture probe set, that allows both the profiling of genotype and methylation from the same DNA sample. Furthermore, we present a method, based on Agilent SureSelect Methyl-Seq, that will use a single capture assay as a starting point to allow both DNA sequencing and methyl-seq.ResultsOur method uses a single capture assay that is sequentially split and used for both DNA sequencing and methyl-seq. The resultant genotype and epi-type data is highly comparable in terms of coverage and SNP/methylation site identification to that generated from separate captures for DNA sequencing and methyl-seq. Furthermore, by defining SNP frequencies in a diverse landrace from the Watkins collection we highlight the importance of having genotype data to prevent false positive methylation calls. Finally, we present the design of a new 12 Mbp wheat capture and demonstrate its successful application to re-sequence wheat.ConclusionsWe present a cost-effective method for performing both DNA sequencing and methyl-seq from a single capture reaction thus reducing reagent costs, sample preparation time and DNA requirements for these complementary analyses.

Highlights

  • IntroductionGenome complexity reduction techniques such as sequence capture make re-sequencing cost effective

  • Bread wheat has a large complex genome that makes whole genome resequencing costly

  • For the third enrichment (Fig. 1), (iii) a Sureselect Methyl-Seq library was again prepared and hybridised as usual but the enriched DNA was eluted, divided and bisulphite converted according to our modified dual-purpose methodology; this is subsequently referred to as bisulphite treated split (BTS)

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Summary

Introduction

Genome complexity reduction techniques such as sequence capture make re-sequencing cost effective. In addition to genetic variation, epigenetic variation provides a source of natural variation contributing to changes in gene expression and phenotype that can be profiled at the base pair level using sequence capture coupled with bisulphite treatment. We present a new 12 Mbp wheat capture probe set, that allows both the profiling of genotype and methylation from the same DNA sample. Bread wheat has a large complex allohexaploid genome that is 17GB in size and made up from three progenitor genomes (AABBDD) This size makes whole genome resequencing costly [1]. In addition to genetic variation, epigenetic variation provides a source of natural variability contributing to changes in gene expression and phenotype. It is thought that cytosine methylation may be important for plants, providing a mechanism for rapidly adapting to environmental change

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