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Light Whole Genome Sequence for SNP Discovery Across Domestic Cat Breeds
BMC Genomics
  • James C. Mullikin, National Institutes of Health at Bethesda
  • Nancy F. Hansen, National Institutes of Health at Bethesda
  • Lei Shen, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • Heather Ebling, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • William F. Donahue, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • Wei Tao, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • David J. Saranga, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • Adrianne Brand, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • Marc J. Rubenfield, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • Alice C. Young, National Institutes of Health at Bethesda
  • Pedro Cruz, National Institutes of Health at Bethesda
  • Carlos Driscoll, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
  • Victor David, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
  • Samer W. K. Al-Murrani, Hill's Pet Nutrition Inc.
  • Mary F. Locniskar, Hill's Pet Nutrition Inc.
  • Mitchell S. Abrahamsen, Hill's Pet Nutrition Inc.
  • Stephen J. O'Brien, National Cancer Institute at Frederick
  • Douglas R. Smith, Agencourt Bioscience Corporation
  • Jeffrey A. Brockman, Hill's Pet Nutrition Inc.
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2010
Abstract

Background

The domestic cat has offered enormous genomic potential in the veterinary description of over 250 hereditary disease models as well as the occurrence of several deadly feline viruses (feline leukemia virus -- FeLV, feline coronavirus -- FECV, feline immunodeficiency virus - FIV) that are homologues to human scourges (cancer, SARS, and AIDS respectively). However, to realize this bio-medical potential, a high density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) map is required in order to accomplish disease and phenotype association discovery.

Description

To remedy this, we generated 3,178,297 paired fosmid-end Sanger sequence reads from seven cats, and combined these data with the publicly available 2X cat whole genome sequence. All sequence reads were assembled together to form a 3X whole genome assembly allowing the discovery of over three million SNPs. To reduce potential false positive SNPs due to the low coverage assembly, a low upper-limit was placed on sequence coverage and a high lower-limit on the quality of the discrepant bases at a potential variant site. In all domestic cats of different breeds: female Abyssinian, female American shorthair, male Cornish Rex, female European Burmese, female Persian, female Siamese, a male Ragdoll and a female African wildcat were sequenced lightly. We report a total of 964 k common SNPs suitable for a domestic cat SNP genotyping array and an additional 900 k SNPs detected between African wildcat and domestic cats breeds. An empirical sampling of 94 discovered SNPs were tested in the sequenced cats resulting in a SNP validation rate of 99%.

Conclusions

These data provide a large collection of mapped feline SNPs across the cat genome that will allow for the development of SNP genotyping platforms for mapping feline diseases.

Comments

©Mullikin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. 2010

ORCID ID
0000-0001-7353-8301
ResearcherID
N-1726-2015
Citation Information
James C. Mullikin, Nancy F. Hansen, Lei Shen, Heather Ebling, et al.. "Light Whole Genome Sequence for SNP Discovery Across Domestic Cat Breeds" BMC Genomics Vol. 11 Iss. 406 (2010) p. 1 - 8 ISSN: 1471-2164
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/stephen-obrien/394/