Log on / register
Feedback | Support | My details
Open AccessHighly AccessMethodology article

Characterization of 954 bovine full-CDS cDNA sequences

Gregory P Harhay1 email, Tad S Sonstegard2 email, John W Keele1 email, Michael P Heaton1 email, Michael L Clawson1 email, Warren M Snelling1 email, Ralph T Wiedmann1 email, Curt P Van Tassell2 email and Timothy PL Smith1 email

1USDA-ARS-U.S. Meat Animal Research Center, Clay Center, NE 68901, USA

2USDA-ARS-Beltsville Area Research Center, Beltsville, MD, USA

author email corresponding author email

BMC Genomics 2005, 6:166doi:10.1186/1471-2164-6-166

Published: 23 November 2005

Abstract

Background

Genome assemblies rely on the existence of transcript sequence to stitch together contigs, verify assembly of whole genome shotgun reads, and annotate genes. Functional genomics studies also rely on transcript sequence to create expression microarrays or interpret digital tag data produced by methods such as Serial Analysis of Gene Expression (SAGE). Transcript sequence can be predicted based on reconstruction from overlapping expressed sequence tags (EST) that are obtained by single-pass sequencing of random cDNA clones, but these reconstructions are prone to errors caused by alternative splice forms, transcripts from gene families with related sequences, and expressed pseudogenes. These errors confound genome assembly and annotation. The most useful transcript sequences are derived by complete insert sequencing of clones containing the entire length, or at least the full protein coding sequence (CDS) portion, of the source mRNA. While the bovine genome sequencing initiative is nearing completion, there is currently a paucity of bovine full-CDS mRNA and protein sequence data to support bovine genome assembly and functional genomics studies. Consequently, the production of high-quality bovine full-CDS cDNA sequences will enhance the bovine genome assembly and functional studies of bovine genes and gene products. The goal of this investigation was to identify and characterize the full-CDS sequences of bovine transcripts from clones identified in non-full-length enriched cDNA libraries. In contrast to several recent full-length cDNA investigations, these full-CDS cDNAs were selected, sequenced, and annotated without the benefit of the target organism's genomic sequence, by using comparison of bovine EST sequence to existing human mRNA to identify likely full-CDS clones for full-length insert cDNA (FLIC) sequencing.

Results

The predicted bovine protein lengths, 5' UTR lengths, and Kozak consensus sequences from 954 bovine FLIC sequences (bFLICs; average length 1713 nt, representing 762 distinct loci) are all consistent with previously sequenced mammalian full-length transcripts.

Conclusion

In most cases, the bFLICs span the entire CDS of the genes, providing the basis for creating predicted bovine protein sequences to support proteomics and comparative evolutionary research as well as functional genomics and genome annotation. The results demonstrate the utility of the comparative approach in obtaining predicted protein sequences in other species.


© 1999-2009 BioMed Central Ltd unless otherwise stated. Part of Springer Science+Business Media.