Improved canine exome designs, featuring ncRNAs and increased coverage of protein coding genes

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Abstract

By limiting sequencing to those sequences transcribed as mRNA, whole exome sequencing is a cost-efficient technique often used in disease-association studies. We developed two target enrichment designs based on the recently released annotation of the canine genome: the exome-plus design and the exome-CDS design. The exome-plus design combines the exons of the CanFam 3.1 Ensembl annotation, more recently discovered protein-coding exons and a variety of non-coding RNA regions (microRNAs, long non-coding RNAs and antisense transcripts), leading to a total size of ' ‰152 Mb. The exome-CDS was designed as a subset of the exome-plus by omitting all 3'and 5'untranslated regions. This reduced the size of the exome-CDS to ' ‰71 Mb. To test the capturing performance, four exome-plus captures were sequenced on a NextSeq 500 with each capture containing four pre-capture pooled, barcoded samples. At an average sequencing depth of 68.3x, 80% of the regions and well over 90% of the targeted base pairs were completely covered at least 5 times with high reproducibility. Based on the performance of the exome-plus, we estimated the performance of the exome-CDS. Overall, these designs provide flexible solutions for a variety of research questions and are likely to be reliable tools in disease studies.

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Broeckx, B. J. G., Hitte, C., Coopman, F., Verhoeven, G. E. C., De Keulenaer, S., De Meester, E., … Deforce, D. (2015). Improved canine exome designs, featuring ncRNAs and increased coverage of protein coding genes. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep12810

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