Single-copy genes define a conserved order between rice and wheat for understanding differences caused by duplication, deletion, and transposition of genes

dc.contributor.author Singh, Nagendra K.
dc.contributor.author Dalal, Vivek
dc.contributor.author Batra, Kamlesh
dc.contributor.author Singh, Binay K.
dc.contributor.author Chitra, G.
dc.contributor.author Singh, Archana
dc.contributor.author Ghazi, Irfan A.
dc.contributor.author Yadav, Mahavir
dc.contributor.author Pandit, Awadhesh
dc.contributor.author Dixit, Rekha
dc.contributor.author Singh, Pradeep K.
dc.contributor.author Singh, Harvinder
dc.contributor.author Koundal, Kirpa R.
dc.contributor.author Gaikwad, Kishor
dc.contributor.author Mohapatra, Trilochan
dc.contributor.author Sharma, Tilak R.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-27T03:48:13Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-27T03:48:13Z
dc.date.issued 2007-01-01
dc.description.abstract The high-quality rice genome sequence is serving as a reference for comparative genome analysis in crop plants, especially cereals. However, early comparisons with bread wheat showed complex patterns of conserved synteny (gene content) and colinearity (gene order). Here, we show the presence of ancient duplicated segments in the progenitor of wheat, which were first identified in the rice genome. We also show that single-copy (SC) rice genes, those representing unique matches with wheat expressed sequence tag (EST) unigene contigs in the whole rice genome, show more than twice the proportion of genes mapping to syntenic wheat chromosome as compared to the multicopy (MC) or duplicated rice genes. While 58.7% of the 1,244 mapped SC rice genes were located in single syntenic wheat chromosome groups, the remaining 41.3% were distributed randomly to the other six non-syntenic wheat groups. This could only be explained by a background dispersal of genes in the genome through transposition or other unknown mechanism. The breakdown of rice-wheat synteny due to such transpositions was much greater near the wheat centromeres. Furthermore, the SC rice genes revealed a conserved primordial gene order that gives clues to the origin of rice and wheat chromosomes from a common ancestor through polyploidy, aneuploidy, centromeric fusions, and translocations. Apart from the bin-mapped wheat EST contigs, we also compared 56,298 predicted rice genes with 39,813 wheat EST contigs assembled from 409,765 EST sequences and identified 7,241 SC rice gene homologs of wheat. Based on the conserved colinearity of 1,063 mapped SC rice genes across the bins of individual wheat chromosomes, we predicted the wheat bin location of 6,178 unmapped SC rice gene homologs and validated the location of 213 of these in the telomeric bins of 21 wheat chromosomes with 35.4% initial success. This opens up the possibility of directed mapping of a large number of conserved SC rice gene homologs in wheat. Overall, only 46.4% of these SC genes code for proteins with known functional domains; the remaining 53.6% have unknown function, and hence, represent an important, but yet, under explored category of genes. © Springer-Verlag 2006.
dc.identifier.citation Functional and Integrative Genomics. v.7(1)
dc.identifier.issn 1438793X
dc.identifier.uri 10.1007/s10142-006-0033-4
dc.identifier.uri http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s10142-006-0033-4
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.uohyd.ac.in/handle/1/5548
dc.subject Colinearity
dc.subject Rice
dc.subject Single-copy genes
dc.subject Synteny
dc.subject Wheat
dc.title Single-copy genes define a conserved order between rice and wheat for understanding differences caused by duplication, deletion, and transposition of genes
dc.type Journal. Article
dspace.entity.type
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