Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2002241509> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2002241509 endingPage "390" @default.
- W2002241509 startingPage "390" @default.
- W2002241509 abstract "Understanding the genetic basis of adaptive changes has been a major goal of evolutionary biology. In complex organisms without sequenced genomes, de novo transcriptome assembly using a longer read sequencing technology followed by expression profiling using short reads is likely to provide comprehensive identification of adaptive variation at the expression level and sequence polymorphisms in coding regions. We performed sequencing and de novo assembly of the bank vole heart transcriptome in lines selected for high metabolism and unselected controls. A single 454 Titanium run produced over million reads, which were assembled into 63,581 contigs. Searches against the SwissProt protein database and the ENSEMBL collection of mouse transcripts detected similarity to 11,181 and 14,051 genes, respectively. As judged by the representation of genes from the heart-related Gene Ontology categories and UniGenes detected in the mouse heart, our detection of the genes expressed in the heart was nearly complete (> 95% and almost 90% respectively). On average, 38.7% of the transcript length was covered by our sequences, with notably higher (45.0%) coverage of coding regions than of untranslated regions (24.5% of 5' and 32.7% of 3'UTRs). Lower sequence conservation between mouse and bank vole in untranslated regions was found to be partially responsible for poorer UTR representation. Our data might suggest a widespread transcription from noncoding genomic regions, a finding not reported in previous studies regarding transcriptomes in non-model organisms. We also identified over 19 thousand putative single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). A much higher fraction of the SNPs than expected by chance exhibited variant frequency differences between selection regimes. Longer reads and higher sequence yield per run provided by the 454 Titanium technology in comparison to earlier generations of pyrosequencing proved beneficial for the quality of assembly. An almost full representation of genes known to be expressed in the mouse heart was identified. Usage of the extensive genomic resources available for the house mouse, a moderately (20-40 mln years) divergent relative of the voles, enabled a comprehensive assessment of the transcript completeness. Transcript sequences generated in the present study allowed the identification of candidate SNPs associated with divergence of selection lines and constitute a valuable permanent resource forming a foundation for RNAseq experiments aiming at detection of adaptive changes both at the level of gene expression and sequence variants, that would facilitate studies of the genetic basis of evolutionary divergence." @default.
- W2002241509 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5000927995 @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5024869766 @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5056361312 @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5058010286 @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5062448460 @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5072722511 @default.
- W2002241509 creator A5089938252 @default.
- W2002241509 date "2010-01-01" @default.
- W2002241509 modified "2023-10-07" @default.
- W2002241509 title "Heart transcriptome of the bank vole (Myodes glareolus): towards understanding the evolutionary variation in metabolic rate" @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1507241016 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1525014224 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1966018752 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1973996769 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1978967539 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1980471868 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1981348283 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1981509058 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1983258431 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1985484001 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1989977248 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1992550017 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W1993549062 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2002744925 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2013873529 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2022910577 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2026628960 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2031581341 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2044695803 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2053483410 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2054361477 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2061680337 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2065065003 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2077689651 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2087377443 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2087518135 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2087878206 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2091161969 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2094725415 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2095907724 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2096940705 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2096958581 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2097576025 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2099468911 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2105776281 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2105834558 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2112491476 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2118526609 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2119502341 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2125013165 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2133351051 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2135990544 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2144924760 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2145023185 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2148043260 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2148740964 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2150711660 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2154431984 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2155331065 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2155804510 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2159594972 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2160276176 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2162370352 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2165913278 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2166265186 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W2491992902 @default.
- W2002241509 cites W3209334210 @default.
- W2002241509 doi "https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-11-390" @default.
- W2002241509 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/2996923" @default.
- W2002241509 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20565972" @default.
- W2002241509 hasPublicationYear "2010" @default.
- W2002241509 type Work @default.
- W2002241509 sameAs 2002241509 @default.
- W2002241509 citedByCount "23" @default.
- W2002241509 countsByYear W20022415092012 @default.
- W2002241509 countsByYear W20022415092013 @default.
- W2002241509 countsByYear W20022415092014 @default.
- W2002241509 countsByYear W20022415092015 @default.
- W2002241509 countsByYear W20022415092016 @default.
- W2002241509 countsByYear W20022415092017 @default.
- W2002241509 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5000927995 @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5024869766 @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5056361312 @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5058010286 @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5062448460 @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5072722511 @default.
- W2002241509 hasAuthorship W2002241509A5089938252 @default.
- W2002241509 hasBestOaLocation W20022415091 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C104317684 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C105580179 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C135763542 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C141231307 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C141674004 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C150194340 @default.
- W2002241509 hasConcept C153209595 @default.