In Silico identification and annotation of noncoding RNAs by RNA-seq and de Novo assembly of the transcriptome of Tomato Fruits

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Abstract

The complexity of the tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) transcriptome has not yet been fully elucidated. To gain insights into the diversity and features of coding and non-coding RNA molecules of tomato fruits, we generated strand-specific libraries from berries of two tomato cultivars grown in two open-field conditions with different soil type. Following high-throughput Illumina RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq), more than 90% of the reads (over one billion, derived from twelve dataset) were aligned to the tomato reference genome. We report a comprehensive analysis of the transcriptome, improved with 39,095 transcripts, which reveals previously unannotated novel transcripts, natural antisense transcripts, long noncoding RNAs and alternative splicing variants. In addition, we investigated the sequence variants between the cultivars under investigation to highlight their genetic difference. Our strand-specific analysis allowed us to expand the current tomato transcriptome annotation and it is the first to reveal the complexity of the poly-adenylated RNA world in tomato. Moreover, our work demonstrates the usefulness of strand specific RNA-seq approach for the transcriptome-based genome annotation and provides a resource valuable for further functional studies.

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Scarano, D., Rao, R., & Corrado, G. (2017). In Silico identification and annotation of noncoding RNAs by RNA-seq and de Novo assembly of the transcriptome of Tomato Fruits. PLoS ONE, 12(2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0171504

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