Abstract

BackgroundDespite the significance of chicken as a model organism, our understanding of the chicken transcriptome is limited compared to human. This issue is common to all non-human vertebrate annotations due to the difficulty in transcript identification from short read RNAseq data. While previous studies have used single molecule long read sequencing for transcript discovery, they did not perform RNA normalization and 5′-cap selection which may have resulted in lower transcriptome coverage and truncated transcript sequences.ResultsWe sequenced normalised chicken brain and embryo RNA libraries with Pacific Bioscience Iso-Seq. 5′ cap selection was performed on the embryo library to provide methodological comparison. From these Iso-Seq sequencing projects, we have identified 60 k transcripts and 29 k genes within the chicken transcriptome. Of these, more than 20 k are novel lncRNA transcripts with ~3 k classified as sense exonic overlapping lncRNA, which is a class that is underrepresented in many vertebrate annotations. The relative proportion of alternative transcription events revealed striking similarities between the chicken and human transcriptomes while also providing explanations for previously observed genomic differences.ConclusionsOur results indicate that the chicken transcriptome is similar in complexity compared to human, and provide insights into other vertebrate biology. Our methodology demonstrates the potential of Iso-Seq sequencing to rapidly expand our knowledge of transcriptomics.

Highlights

  • Despite the significance of chicken as a model organism, our understanding of the chicken transcriptome is limited compared to human

  • We have adopted methodology supported by the Pacific Biosciences (PacBio) development team known as the Iso-Seq pipeline, known as the pbtranscript-tofu analysis suite [15], and incorporated it into our own pipeline (Fig. 2)

  • Within the noncoding RNAs, we found that 23 transcripts were shorter than 200 bp which means the rest were classified as long noncoding RNAs

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the significance of chicken as a model organism, our understanding of the chicken transcriptome is limited compared to human. This issue is common to all non-human vertebrate annotations due to the difficulty in transcript identification from short read RNAseq data. The Ensembl chicken annotation (release 83), built primarily on short read RNAseq and comparative data, contains 17,108 genes with 17,954 transcripts [5]. These numbers stand out for two major reasons.

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