TY - JOUR T1 - Generation and comparative analysis of full-length transcriptomes in sweetpotato and its putative wild ancestor <em>I. trifida</em> JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/112425 SP - 112425 AU - Yonghai Luo AU - Na Ding AU - Xuan Shi AU - Yunxiang Wu AU - Ruyuan Wang AU - Lingquan Pei AU - Ruoyu Xu AU - Shuo Cheng AU - Yongyan Lian AU - Jingyan Gao AU - Aimin Wang AU - Qinghe Cao AU - Jun Tang Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/03/30/112425.abstract N2 - Sweetpotato [Ipomoea batatas (L.) Lam.] is one of the most important crops in many developing countries and provides a candidate source of bioenergy. However, neither high-quality reference genome nor large-scale full-length cDNA sequences for this outcrossing hexaploid are still lacking, which in turn impedes progress in research studies in sweetpotato functional genomics and molecular breeding. In this study, we apply a combination of second-and third-generation sequencing technologies to sequence full-length transcriptomes in sweetpotato and its putative ancestor I. trifida. In total, we obtained 53,861/51,184 high-quality transcripts, which includes 34,963/33,637 putative full-length cDNA sequences, from sweetpotato/I. trifida. Amongst, we identified 104,540/94,174 open reading frames, 1476/1475 transcription factors, 25,315/27,090 simple sequence repeats, 417/531 long non-coding RNAs out of the sweetpotato/I. trifida dataset. By utilizing public available genomic contigs, we analyzed the gene features (including exon number, exon size, intron number, intron size, exon-intron structure) of 33,119 and 32,793 full-length transcripts in sweetpotato and I. trifida, respectively. Furthermore, comparative analysis between our transcript datasets and other large-scale cDNA datasets from different plant species enables us assessing the quality of public datasets, estimating the genetic similarity across relative species, and surveyed the evolutionary pattern of genes. Overall, our study provided fundamental resources of large-scale full-length transcripts in sweetpotato and its putative ancestor, for the first time, and would facilitate structural, functional and comparative genomics studies in this important crop. ER -