A pangenome graph reference of 30 chicken genomes allows genotyping of large and complex structural variants
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Published:2023-11-22
Issue:1
Volume:21
Page:
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ISSN:1741-7007
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Container-title:BMC Biology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMC Biol
Author:
Rice Edward S.ORCID, Alberdi Antton, Alfieri James, Athrey Giridhar, Balacco Jennifer R., Bardou Philippe, Blackmon Heath, Charles Mathieu, Cheng Hans H., Fedrigo Olivier, Fiddaman Steven R., Formenti Giulio, Frantz Laurent A. F., Gilbert M. Thomas P., Hearn Cari J., Jarvis Erich D., Klopp Christophe, Marcos Sofia, Mason Andrew S., Velez-Irizarry Deborah, Xu Luohao, Warren Wesley C.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The red junglefowl, the wild outgroup of domestic chickens, has historically served as a reference for genomic studies of domestic chickens. These studies have provided insight into the etiology of traits of commercial importance. However, the use of a single reference genome does not capture diversity present among modern breeds, many of which have accumulated molecular changes due to drift and selection. While reference-based resequencing is well-suited to cataloging simple variants such as single-nucleotide changes and short insertions and deletions, it is mostly inadequate to discover more complex structural variation in the genome.
Methods
We present a pangenome for the domestic chicken consisting of thirty assemblies of chickens from different breeds and research lines.
Results
We demonstrate how this pangenome can be used to catalog structural variants present in modern breeds and untangle complex nested variation. We show that alignment of short reads from 100 diverse wild and domestic chickens to this pangenome reduces reference bias by 38%, which affects downstream genotyping results. This approach also allows for the accurate genotyping of a large and complex pair of structural variants at the K feathering locus using short reads, which would not be possible using a linear reference.
Conclusions
We expect that this new paradigm of genomic reference will allow better pinpointing of exact mutations responsible for specific phenotypes, which will in turn be necessary for breeding chickens that meet new sustainability criteria and are resilient to quickly evolving pathogen threats.
Funder
National Institute of Food and Agriculture HORIZON EUROPE Research Infrastructures
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Plant Science,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Physiology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Structural Biology,Biotechnology
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