MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are important regulators of many cellular processes and exist in a wide range of eukaryotes. Highthroughput sequencing is a mainstream method of miRNA identification through which it is possible to obtain the complete small RNA profile of an organism. Currently, most approaches to miRNA identification rely on a reference genome for the prediction of hairpin structures. However, many species of economic and phylogenetic importance are non-model organisms without complete genome sequences, and this limits miRNA discovery. Here, to overcome this limitation, we have developed a contig-based miRNA identification strategy. We applied this method to a triploid species of edible banana (GCTCV-119, Musa spp. AAA group) and identified 180 pre-miRNAs and 314 mature miRNAs, which is three times more than those were predicted by the available dataset-based methods (represented by EST +GSS). Based on the recently published miRNA data set of Musa acuminate, the recall rate and precision of our strategy are estimated to be 70.6% and 92.2%, respectively, significantly better than those of EST+GSS-based strategy (10.2% and 50.0%, respectively). Our novel, efficient and cost-effective strategy facilitates the study of the functional and evolutionary role of miRNAs, as well as miRNA-based molecular breeding, in non-model species of economic or evolutionary interest. © 2014 Wen et al.
CITATION STYLE
Wen, J. Z., Liao, J. Y., Zheng, L. L., Xu, H., Yang, J. H., Guan, D. G., … Qu, L. H. (2014). A contig-based strategy for the genome-wide discovery of MicroRNAs without complete genome resources. PLoS ONE, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0088179
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