Abstract

BackgroundThe recent development of next generation sequencing technologies has made it possible to generate very large amounts of sequence data in species with little or no genome information. Combined with the large phenotypic databases available for wild and non-model species, these data will provide an unprecedented opportunity to "genomicise" ecological model organisms and establish the genetic basis of quantitative traits in natural populations.ResultsThis paper describes the sequencing, de novo assembly and analysis from the transcriptome of eight tissues of ten wild great tits. Approximately 4.6 million sequences and 1.4 billion bases of DNA were generated and assembled into 95,979 contigs, one third of which aligned with known Taeniopygia guttata (zebra finch) and Gallus gallus (chicken) transcripts. The majority (78%) of the remaining contigs aligned within or very close to regions of the zebra finch genome containing known genes, suggesting that they represented precursor mRNA rather than untranscribed genomic DNA. More than 35,000 single nucleotide polymorphisms and 10,000 microsatellite repeats were identified. Eleven percent of contigs were expressed in every tissue, while twenty one percent of contigs were expressed in only one tissue. The function of those contigs with strong evidence for tissue specific expression and contigs expressed in every tissue was inferred from the gene ontology (GO) terms associated with these contigs; heart and pancreas had the highest number of highly tissue specific GO terms (21.4% and 28.5% respectively).ConclusionsIn summary, the transcriptomic data generated in this study will contribute towards efforts to assemble and annotate the great tit genome, as well as providing the markers required to perform gene mapping studies in wild populations.

Highlights

  • The recent development of generation sequencing technologies has made it possible to generate very large amounts of sequence data in species with little or no genome information

  • The integration of classical quantitative genetic studies with genomic data provide an exciting opportunity for molecular ecologists to begin to understand the processes governing the evolution and maintenance of quantitative trait variation in wild populations

  • Mapping non-gene contigs We further investigated the 59,955 contigs that mapped to the zebra finch genome but did not match anything in the zebra finch Complementary DNA (cDNA) database

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Summary

Introduction

The recent development of generation sequencing technologies has made it possible to generate very large amounts of sequence data in species with little or no genome information. Combined with the large phenotypic databases available for wild and non-model species, these data will provide an unprecedented opportunity to “genomicise” ecological model organisms and establish the genetic basis of quantitative traits in natural populations. The great tit (Parus major) is a small (~17 g) cavity nesting passerine species widespread and abundant in woodland across Eurasia As they are highly amenable to using nest boxes, great tits have become a model study organism in behavioural ecology and evolutionary biology, with regard to studying the evolutionary ecology of life history and morphological traits such as clutch size [7], lifetime fitness [8,9], fledgling mass and adult body mass [10,11,12,13]. Quantitative genetic approaches have been extended to examine phenotypic plasticity in response to climate change [14,15,16], the heritability of personality traits [17] and reproductive senescence [18]

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