Abstract

Enormous genomic resources have been developed for plants in the monocot order Poales; however, it is not known how useful these resources will be for other economically important monocots. Asparagales are a monophyletic order sister to class Commelinanae that carries Poales, and is the second most economically important monocot order. Development of genomic resources for and their application to Asparagales are challenging because of huge nuclear genomes and the relatively long generation times required to develop segregating families. We synthesized a normalized eDNA library of onion (Allium cepa) and produced II ,008 unique expressed sequence tags (ESTs) for comparative genomic analyses of Asparagales and Poales. Alignments of onion ESTs, Poales ESTs, and genomic sequences from rice were used to design oligonucleotide primers amplifying genomic regions from asparagus, garlic, and onion. Sequence analyses of these genomic regions revealed microsatellites, insertions/deletions, and single nucleotide polymorphisms for comparative mapping of rice and Asparagales vegetables. Initial mapping revealed no obvious synteny at the recombinationallevel between onion and rice, indicating that genomic resources developed for Poales may not be applicable to the monocots as a whole. Genomic analyses of Asparagales would greatly benefit from EST sequencing and deep-coverage, large-insert genomic libraries of representative small-genome model species within the "higher" and "lower" Asparagales, such as asparagus and orchid, respectively.

Highlights

  • Class Commelinanae and order Asparagales are two major monophyletic groups within the monocots (Chase et al 1995; Rudall et al 1997)

  • The development of genomic resources for Asparagales is challenging due to huge nuclear genomes (Fig. 1), relatively long generation times, and few financial resources

  • The application of geno mic techno logies to Asparagales wou ld be greatly e nhanced by generation of expressed seq ue nce tags (ESTs), productio n of hi gh-de nsity genetic maps based o n ho mologous seque nces from diverge nt species, and the assembly of geno mi c contigs covering large reg ions of the nuclear DNA

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Summary

Recommended Citation

Michael J.; Sink, Kenneth C.; Jenderek, Maria; and Town, Christopher D. (2006) "Genomic Resources for Asparagales," Aliso: A Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany: Vol 22: Iss. 1, Article 25.

INTRODUCTION
No BAC clones
Asparaga les Genomics
MATER IALS AND METHODS
USS ION
Rice Chromosomes
LITERATURE CITED
Full Text
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