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Open AccessHighly AccessResearch article

Towards the understanding of the cocoa transcriptome: Production and analysis of an exhaustive dataset of ESTs of Theobroma cacao generated from various tissues and under various conditions.

Xavier Argout email, Olivier Fouet email, Patrick Wincker email, Karina Gramacho email, Thierry Legavre email, Xavier Sabau email, Ange-Marie Risterucci email, Corinne Da Silva email, Julio Cascardo email, Mathilde Allegre email, David Kuhn email, Joseph A Verica email, Brigitte Courtois email, Rey G Loor email, Babin Regis email, Olivier Sounigo email, Michel Ducamp email, Mark J Guiltinan email, Manuel Ruiz email, Laurence Alemanno email, Regina Machado email, Wilberth Phillips email, Ray Schnell email, Martin Gilmour email, Eric Rosenquist email, David Butler email, Siela Maximova email and Claire Lanaud email

BMC Genomics 2008, 9:512doi:10.1186/1471-2164-9-512

Published: 30 October 2008

Abstract (provisional)

Background

Theobroma cacao L., is a tree originated from the tropical rainforest of South America. It is one of the major cash crops for many tropical countries. T. cacao is mainly produced on smallholdings, providing resources for 14 million farmers. Disease resistance and T. cacao quality improvement are two important challenges for all actors of cocoa and chocolate production. T. cacao is seriously affected by pests and fungal diseases, responsible for more than 40% yield losses and quality improvement, nutritional and organoleptic, is also important for consumers. An international collaboration was formed to develop an EST genomic resource database for cacao.

Results

Fifty-six cDNA libraries were constructed from different organs, different genotypes and different environmental conditions. A total of 149,650 valid EST sequences were generated corresponding to 48,594 unigenes, 12,692 contigs and 35,902 singletons. A total of 29,849 unigenes shared significant homology with public sequences from other species. Gene Ontology (GO) annotation was applied to distribute the ESTs among the main GO categories. A specific information system (ESTtik) was constructed to process, store and manage this EST collection allowing the user to query a database. To check the representativeness of our EST collection, we looked for the genes known to be involved in two different metabolic pathways extensively studied in other plant species and important for T. cacao qualities: the flavonoid and the terpene pathways. Most of the enzymes described in other crops for these two metabolic pathways were found in our EST collection. A large collection of new genetic markers was provided by this ESTs collection.

Conclusion

This EST collection displays a good representation of the T. cacao transcriptome, suitable for analysis of biochemical pathways based on oligonucleotide microarrays derived from these ESTs. It will provide numerous genetic markers that will allow the construction of a high density gene map of T. cacao. This EST collection represents a unique and important molecular resource for T. cacao study and improvement, facilitating the discovery of candidate genes for important T. cacao trait variation.

The complete article is available as a provisional PDF. The fully formatted PDF and HTML versions are in production.


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