PGSB/MIPS plant genome information resources and concepts for the analysis of complex grass genomes

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Abstract

PGSB (Plant Genome and Systems Biology; formerly MIPS—Munich Institute for Protein Sequences) has been involved in developing, implementing and maintaining plant genome databases for more than a decade. Genome databases and analysis resources have focused on individual genomes and aim to provide flexible and maintainable datasets for model plant genomes as a backbone against which experimental data, e.g., from high-throughput functional genomics, can be organized and analyzed. In addition, genomes from both model and crop plants form a scaffold for comparative genomics, assisted by specialized tools such as the CrowsNest viewer to explore conserved gene order (synteny) between related species on macro- and micro-levels. The genomes of many economically important Triticeae plants such as wheat, barley, and rye present a great challenge for sequence assembly and bioinformatic analysis due to their enormous complexity and large genome size. Novel concepts and strategies have been developed to deal with these difficulties and have been applied to the genomes of wheat, barley, rye, and other cereals. This includes the Genome Zipper concept, reference-guided exome assembly, and “chromosome genomics” based on flow cytometry sorted chromosomes.

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Spannagl, M., Bader, K., Pfeifer, M., Nussbaumer, T., & Mayer, K. F. X. (2016). PGSB/MIPS plant genome information resources and concepts for the analysis of complex grass genomes. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1374, pp. 165–186). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-3167-5_8

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