Abstract

BackgroundExperimental proof of gene function assignments in plants is based on mutant analyses. T-DNA insertion lines provided an invaluable resource of mutants and enabled systematic reverse genetics-based investigation of the functions of Arabidopsis thaliana genes during the last decades.ResultsWe sequenced the genomes of 14 A. thaliana GABI-Kat T-DNA insertion lines, which eluded flanking sequence tag-based attempts to characterize their insertion loci, with Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) long reads. Complex T-DNA insertions were resolved and 11 previously unknown T-DNA loci identified, resulting in about 2 T-DNA insertions per line and suggesting that this number was previously underestimated. T-DNA mutagenesis caused fusions of chromosomes along with compensating translocations to keep the gene set complete throughout meiosis. Also, an inverted duplication of 800 kbp was detected. About 10 % of GABI-Kat lines might be affected by chromosomal rearrangements, some of which do not involve T-DNA. Local assembly of selected reads was shown to be a computationally effective method to resolve the structure of T-DNA insertion loci. We developed an automated workflow to support investigation of long read data from T-DNA insertion lines. All steps from DNA extraction to assembly of T-DNA loci can be completed within days.ConclusionsLong read sequencing was demonstrated to be an effective way to resolve complex T-DNA insertions and chromosome fusions. Many T-DNA insertions comprise not just a single T-DNA, but complex arrays of multiple T-DNAs. It is becoming obvious that T-DNA insertion alleles must be characterized by exact identification of both T-DNA::genome junctions to generate clear genotype-to-phenotype relations.

Highlights

  • Experimental proof of gene function assignments in plants is based on mutant analyses

  • In total, 14 GABI-Kat T-DNA insertion lines (Table 1, Additional file 1) were selected for genomic analysis via Oxford Nanopore Technologies (ONT) long read sequencing. This set of lines was selected based on prior knowledge which indicated that the insertion locus addressed in the respective line was potentially unusual

  • The specific feature used for selection was the observation that creation of confirmation amplicons which span the T-DNA::genome junction failed for one of the two junctions, operationally that means that the 2nd border could not be confirmed

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Summary

Introduction

Experimental proof of gene function assignments in plants is based on mutant analyses. T-DNA insertion lines provided an invaluable resource of mutants and enabled systematic reverse genetics-based investigation of the functions of Arabidopsis thaliana genes during the last decades. T-DNA insertion lines contributed substantially to the high-value knowledge about the functions of plant genes. This knowledge has been produced by the plant research community on the basis of gene structures predicted from genome sequences. T-DNA insertional mutagenesis emerged as an effective mechanism for the generation of knock-out alleles for use in reverse genetics and targeted gene function search [1, 2]. Since targeted integration of DNA into plant genomes via homologous recombination was at least technically challenging [3], large collections of sequence-indexed T-DNA integration lines with random insertion sites were used to provide knock-out alleles for the majority of genes [4]. Thousands of T-DNA insertion mutants have been characterized and represent today the main or reference mutant allele for (lack of) a given gene function

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