Abstract
Olive breeding programmes are focused on selecting for traits as short juvenile period, plant architecture suited for mechanical harvest, or oil characteristics, including fatty acid composition, phenolic, and volatile compounds to suit new markets. Understanding the molecular basis of these characteristics and improving the efficiency of such breeding programmes require the development of genomic information and tools. However, despite its economic relevance, genomic information on olive or closely related species is still scarce. We have applied Sanger and 454 pyrosequencing technologies to generate close to 2 million reads from 12 cDNA libraries obtained from the Picual, Arbequina, and Lechin de Sevilla cultivars and seedlings from a segregating progeny of a Picual × Arbequina cross. The libraries include fruit mesocarp and seeds at three relevant developmental stages, young stems and leaves, active juvenile and adult buds as well as dormant buds, and juvenile and adult roots. The reads were assembled by library or tissue and then assembled together into 81 020 unigenes with an average size of 496 bases. Here, we report their assembly and their functional annotation. © 2013 The Author. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Kazusa DNA Research Institute.
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Muñoz-Mérida, A., González-Plaza, J. J., Cañada, A., Blanco, A. M., Del Carmen García-López, M., Rodríguez, J. M., … Beuzón, C. R. (2013). De novo assembly and functional annotation of the olive (Olea europaea) transcriptome. DNA Research, 20(1), 93–108. https://doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dss036
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