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. 2014 Aug 21;14:220. doi: 10.1186/s12870-014-0220-8

Comparative in silico analysis of EST-SSRs in angiosperm and gymnosperm tree genera

Sonali Sachin Ranade 1, Yao-Cheng Lin 2, Andrea Zuccolo 3,4, Yves Van de Peer 2,5, María del Rosario García-Gil 1,
PMCID: PMC4160553  PMID: 25143005

Abstract

Background

Simple Sequence Repeats (SSRs) derived from Expressed Sequence Tags (ESTs) belong to the expressed fraction of the genome and are important for gene regulation, recombination, DNA replication, cell cycle and mismatch repair. Here, we present a comparative analysis of the SSR motif distribution in the 5′UTR, ORF and 3′UTR fractions of ESTs across selected genera of woody trees representing gymnosperms (17 species from seven genera) and angiosperms (40 species from eight genera).

Results

Our analysis supports a modest contribution of EST-SSR length to genome size in gymnosperms, while EST-SSR density was not associated with genome size in neither angiosperms nor gymnosperms. Multiple factors seem to have contributed to the lower abundance of EST-SSRs in gymnosperms that has resulted in a non-linear relationship with genome size diversity. The AG/CT motif was found to be the most abundant in SSRs of both angiosperms and gymnosperms, with a relative increase in AT/AT in the latter. Our data also reveals a higher abundance of hexamers across the gymnosperm genera.

Conclusions

Our analysis provides the foundation for future comparative studies at the species level to unravel the evolutionary processes that control the SSR genesis and divergence between angiosperm and gymnosperm tree species.

Electronic supplementary material

The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12870-014-0220-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Keywords: Angiosperms, Gymnosperms, Expressed sequence tags, Simple sequence repeats (SSR), Microsatellites

Background

Microsatellites, also called SSRs (simple sequence repeats) or STRs (short tandem repeats), are 1-6 bp tandem repeat motifs present in both the coding and non-coding fractions of eukaryotic and prokaryotic genomes [1-3]. SSRs are especially abundant in transcribed regions of the genome making them a valuable molecular marker for genetic studies in plants [4]. SSRs result from mutations due to DNA-polymerase slippage during replication and unequal recombination [5]. SSRs are widely used in plant genetic research because of their co-dominant inheritance, relative abundance, multi-allelic nature, high reproducibility and ease of detection [6].

Expressed sequence tags (ESTs) are segments of expressed genes generated by single-pass sequencing of cDNA libraries [7]. In contrast to the genomic SSRs, EST-SSRs represent functional markers located in the coding fractions of the genome and changes in EST-SSRs length can cause a phenotypic effect, irrespective of the mutation site, whether it occurs in 5′- or 3′-UnTranslated Regions (UTRs) or in the Open Reading Frames (ORFs) [8]. The significance of EST-SSRs as a molecular tool in population genetic studies has been known for long [9]. In woody trees, EST-SSRs have been applied in population studies and analysis of genetic diversity in Cycas [10], Picea [11,12], Prunus [13,14], Eucalyptus [15,16] and Populus [17]; in hybrid selection in e.g., Citrus [18]; and also in genetic mapping in Citrus [19], Quercus [20,21] and Pinus [22]. Furthermore, unlike the genomic SSRs, EST-SSRs are easily transferable across species [23], therefore allowing studying polymorphism and genetic diversity in related species [9]. However, EST-SSRs have some disadvantages over genomic SSRs as EST-SSRs are known to be less variable than the genomic SSRs [24] and the amplicon size can also differ from the predicted size due to the effect of presence of introns in the flanking fractions [25].

With the advent of genomics, the availability of ESTs in the public databases, such as NCBI’s dbEST, has increased exponentially allowing for the identification of large numbers of EST-SSRs. For example, characterisation and comparative analysis of EST microsatellites in woody trees have been carried out in Citrus [26-28], Betula [29], Fagus [30], Prunus [31], Quercus [20], Populus [17,32], Eucalyptus [33-35], Cryptomeria [36,37], Cycas [38-40], Ginkgo [41], Picea [5,12] and Pinus [5,42]. However, analysis of SSRs for each individual EST genomic fraction (i.e., 5′- and 3′-UTR, and ORF) has only been carried out in Quercus [20], Cryptomeria [37] and Pinus [43]. Unfortunately, most of the results in those three studies are presented for the entire EST, which can lead to inaccurate results. For example, in Cryptomeria dimers are the most common motif in the 3′UTR fraction; moreover, when all three EST fractions are considered together, trimers are concluded to be the most frequent motif across the entire EST [37]. Furthermore, AT was shown to be the most frequent dimer motif as an overall result, whereas analysis of each EST fraction separately revealed AG as the most frequent dimer in the ORF fraction [37]. These results demonstrate that SSR characterization on the whole EST sequence as a unit will provide only partial information, which may be misleading and result in discrepancies across studies.

Other discrepancies in EST-SSRs motif abundance and distribution across different plant studies can be attributed to the parameter setup [25], annotation deficiency [44], and the selected EST-SSR analysis algorithm [20]. For example, higher abundance of EST-SSR dimers was reported in Pinus [45,46], whereas Yan et al. [47] reported trimers as the most abundant in the same genus. Thus, comparative EST-SSRs studies will be more reliable when the EST data sets are analysed by applying the same bioinformatics procedure. In this study, we performed a comparative analysis of SSRs in each genomic fraction of EST separately (5′UTR, ORF and 3′UTR), across selected angiosperm and gymnosperm genera with a focus on woody trees. The aim was to present highly comparable data on SSR-EST abundance, composition and distribution; for genomes that diverged ~350 Myr [48].

Results

Table 1 shows values for EST-SSRs length and EST-SSR counts per genus across the 5′UTR, ORF and 3′UTR fractions (see also Additional file 1: Table S1).

Table 1.

EST-SSR Counts per Mbp in each genomic fraction in: (a) Angiosperms and (b) Gymnosperms

(a) 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR
Genus Mean Genome size (pg) Motif length* (bp) Counts Mbp Motif length* (bp) Counts Mpb Motif length* (bp) Counts Mbp
Populus 0.52 24.8 (6.04) 1483 25.7 (8.10) 580 24.8 (7.60) 653
Eucalyptus 0.6 25.5 (5.31) 2267 25.1 (5.48) 1248 25.3 (5.83) 638
Betula 0.62 23.1 (3.34) 1404 22.7 (3.02) 893 21.4 (1.51) 945
Fagus 0.56 24 (5.36) 1698 25.2 (7.01) 465 23.9 (4.90) 622
Quercus 0.87 24.2 (5.27) 2739 25.2 (7.98) 949 24.3 (6.78) 1109
Citrus 0.44 24.7 (6.75) 503 25.2 (8.15) 247 24.6 (6.87) 210
Prunus 0.57 27.5 (8.95) 7965 29.5 (11.38) 3089 26.9 (8.57) 4537
Fraxinus 0.93 24.2 (3.38) 551 28.7 (10.23) 183 22.4 (4.17) 236
(b) 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR
Genus Mean Genome size (pg) Motif Length* (bp) Counts Mbp Motif Length* (bp) Counts Mbp Motif Length* (bp) Counts Mbp
Picea 18.1 29.7 (19.49) 247 32.1 (23.20) 206 28.6 (13.59) 250
Pinus 26.4 30.2 (17.80) 216 32.4 (19.09) 184 27.4 (11.98) 187
Cryptomeria 11.2 22.8 (3.95) 223 26.2 (10.37) 218 24.4 (8.40) 240
Gnetum 3.4 23.5 (4.22) 632 24.8 (7.96) 664 22.7 (3.64) 549
Cycas 14.7 23.8 (6.34) 173 26.4 (11.59) 109 24.9 (7.05) 399
Zamia 17 25.8 (6.55) 610 29.0 (12.64) 701 26.3 (8.4) 734
Ginkgo 11.8 24.5 (4.37) 386 29.2 (19.69) 210 27.1 (8.11) 539

*Standard deviation for EST-SSR length is in between parenthesis.

EST-SSR length and complexity

There were no significant differences observed regarding EST-SSRs length between the three genomic fractions within and between taxa. In angiosperms, there was no significant association between genome size and EST-SSRs length for any of the EST fractions. In gymnosperms, however, there was a positive and significant association (r = 0.6; P-value < 0.03) between genome size and EST-SSRs motif length for all three EST fractions.

Perfect EST-SSRs were more frequent than compound ones in both taxa and in all three genomic fractions (Additional file 1: Table S2). In angiosperms, Eucalyptus (ORF) had the highest percentage of compound EST-SSR motifs (7.4%), while Cycas (3′UTR) had the highest percentage of compound SSR motifs (6.8%) in gymnosperms. None of the statistical tests made to compare proportions of complex EST-SSRs within and between taxa were significant. Furthermore, complexity was not significantly associated to genome size.

EST-SSR abundance (motif counts per Mbp)

(i) Overall

In angiosperms, SSR counts showed a wide range across genera, with Prunus having an exceptional high abundance. EST-SSR counts were significantly higher in the 5′UTR fraction and lower in the ORFs. In gymnosperms, the SSR counts range was narrower than in angiosperms with Zamia and Gnetum having the highest values. EST-SSRs were significantly more abundant in the 3′UTR fraction, while there was a non-significant difference in abundance between the 5′UTR and ORF fractions. EST-SSRs were significantly more abundant in angiosperms than in gymnosperms. No association was found between density and genome size in any of the two taxa.

(ii) By motif size

The distribution of counts per Mbp for each of the EST-SSRs, according to motif size, is shown in Table 2. In angiosperms and gymnosperms, dimer motifs showed significantly higher number of counts in all three genomic fractions, followed by trimers, with the exception of Citrus (ORF, trimers > dimers), Cryptomeria (ORF, trimers > dimers) and Gnetum (5′UTR and ORF, trimers > dimers and trimers > hexamers, respectively). Non-significant differences between dimers and trimers were found in Cryptomeria (5′UTR) and Gnetum (3′UTR). In both taxa, the most frequent motif ranking in the ORF was dimer > trimer > hexamer. The same motif ranking was often observed in the UTRs in gymnosperms. Moreover, in angiosperms, hexamers are less often ranked in the third position in the UTRs, supporting a lower representation of hexamers in UTRs in angiosperms. Despite dimers being the motifs with higher number of counts in most of the genera across all three genomic fractions, the proportion of dimers to trimers was clearly lower in the ORF, indicating an enrichment of trimers in the ORF fraction in both taxa. Interestingly, Gnetum was the only genus where dimers rank third when it comes to abundance (ORF, trimers > hexamers > dimers); trimers and hexamers being relatively abundant across all three fractions. In Fraxinus and Fagus, trimers and hexamers were also rather abundant.

Table 2.

Counts per Mbp of different SSR motifs in each genomic fraction in: (a) Angiosperms and (b) Gymnosperms

(a) Populus Eucalyptus Betula Fagus Quercus Citrus Prunus Fraxinus
5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR
Dimer 948 272 379 1821 699 459 1131 649 880 1304 230 397 2193 530 832 318 96 122 6854 2403 3568 522 124 143
Trimer 250 209 146 232 412 91 151 181 0 172 161 77 232 286 126 190 104 43 329 413 388 0 19 57
Tetramer 85 16 42 77 27 27 47 10 41 65 7 21 97 15 49 32 7 15 204 32 133 0 0 8
Pentamer 97 16 35 49 15 23 0 34 0 39 3 35 88 15 45 24 4 9 182 65 163 0 4 12
Hexamer 68 54 28 43 67 17 0 8 0 60 56 49 70 91 26 17 27 7 94 85 82 18 35 12
Heptamer 27 7 18 29 14 14 57 6 24 52 2 41 50 7 25 16 5 9 196 39 120 11 0 5
Octamer 6 2 2 2 4 5 0 0 0 3 1 0 3 1 3 4 1 2 67 18 49 0 0 0
Novamer 1 3 1 7 5 1 0 6 0 0 3 0 1 3 1 1 2 1 15 26 16 0 0 0
Decamer 3 2 2 7 6 2 19 0 0 4 2 1 5 1 2 2 2 2 23 7 18 0 0 0
(b) Picea Pinus Cryptomeria Gnetum Cycas Zamia Ginkgo
5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR
Dimer 183 128 199 169 121 140 46 58 116 133 104 182 118 84 354 503 504 578 319 164 483
Trimer 14 41 12 5 30 8 43 85 47 260 355 169 10 13 12 35 143 60 52 24 12
Tetramer 6 1 10 6 2 11 17 1 9 78 15 69 17 1 12 36 18 52 8 4 13
Pentamer 24 5 12 12 4 8 41 8 20 45 31 41 9 1 6 11 9 21 7 1 17
Hexamer 9 26 6 14 23 8 27 54 22 111 154 74 10 7 13 10 17 3 0 17 14
Heptamer 8 1 8 7 2 6 37 8 22 0 2 5 7 2 2 15 8 19 0 0 0
Octamer 2 1 1 1 1 1 8 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Novamer 1 3 1 1 2 2 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0
Decamer 1 1 1 1 1 2 4 1 2 5 0 8 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0

(iii) By dimer and trimer nucleotide composition

The counts for dimer and trimer nucleotide composition across genomic fractions and genera are shown in Table 3. In angiosperms, the AG/CT dimer motif showed the highest number of counts per Mbp in all genomic fractions and genera, followed by the AT/AT motif, with exception of Betula (AT/AT and AG/CT were present in similar numbers), Citrus (3′UTR; AT/AT) and Populus (3′UTR; AT/AT). In gymnosperms, AT/AT was the most abundant dimer motif in the 3′UTR fraction, with the exception of Cryptomeria, Cycas and Gnetum where AT/AT and AG/CT were present in similar numbers. In the 5′UTR and ORF fractions in gymnosperms, AG/CT was the most abundant motif in most of the genera, with the exception of Cycas (5′UTR), Ginkgo (ORF) and Zamia (ORF), where AT/AT and AG/CT were present in similar numbers; and Ginkgo (5′UTR), Zamia (5′UTR) and Cycas (ORF), where AT/AT was the most abundant. Overall, AT/AT was often the most abundant dimer in gymnosperms. The dimer motif CG/CG was absent in most of the genera and only present at low density in the ORF of Populus and Quercus.

Table 3.

Counts per Mbp of dimer and trimer motifs in all three genomic fractions in: (a) Angiosperms and (b) Gymnosperms

(a)
Motif Populus Eucalyptus Betula Fagus Quercus Citrus Prunus Fraxinus
5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR
AC/GT 53 22 53 27 7 12 - - 98 61 11 7 103 27 43 27 8 18 165 48 101 91 6 34
AG/CT 822 185 148 1788 684 431 1131 649 350 1173 181 262 1885 439 471 230 73 47 5992 2226 2655 431 113 109
AT/AT 73 57 178 7 8 15 - - 432 69 38 128 205 63 317 60 16 57 697 129 811 - 6 -
CG/CG - 8 - - - - - - - - - - - 1 - - - - - - - - - -
ACG/CGT 27 42 14 29 63 11 - - - 6 10 - 5 18 1 6 17 2 15 63 9 - - -
ACT/AGT 23 23 14 17 4 9 66 34 - 13 24 5 27 38 29 6 9 4 29 114 136 - 4 21
AAC/GTT 10 12 9 5 1 - 85 57 - 15 30 10 39 55 17 3 10 1 40 43 22 - - -
AAG/CTT 93 46 43 98 63 28 - 77 - 111 52 22 125 91 31 38 28 12 168 90 86 - 4 11
AAT/ATT 30 11 51 - 5 3 - 14 - 13 11 36 24 14 42 29 16 21 34 26 41 - 4 25
ACC/GGT 26 35 7 - 25 3 - 57 - - 12 5 6 45 3 5 10 1 7 33 5 - 4 -
AGG/CCT 33 32 7 26 63 12 - - - 13 22 - 5 20 3 2 7 1 36 33 26 - - -
CCG/CCG 4 7 1 52 183 12 - - - - 1 - 1 6 - 2 6 1 - 5 - - - -
(b)
Motif Picea Pinus Cryptomeria Gnetum Cycas Zamia Ginkgo
5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR 5′UTR ORF 3′UTR
AC/GT 3 3 4 1 2 1 19 - 9 36 - - - 11 51 79 116 88 40 44 17
AG/CT 95 93 37 101 80 40 19 46 55 76 60 91 54 33 143 170 194 182 120 60 120
AT/AT 85 31 157 67 39 100 8 12 53 20 45 91 64 40 160 254 194 308 346 60 346
CG/CG - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
ACG/CGT 1 10 1 - 8 - - 14 7 76 172 48 - 2 - - 38 - - 10 -
ACT/AGT 1 1 2 - 3 - 9 8 7 38 31 - - - - - 14 11 - - -
AAC/GTT 1 3 - 1 2 1 5 5 - 13 13 12 - - - - - - - - -
AAG/CTT 1 6 2 1 7 - 6 26 10 76 57 86 10 9 - 8 32 16 - 5 -
AAT/ATT 4 3 5 2 2 5 5 3 20 - 4 12 - 2 5 18 31 33 40 8 12
ACC/GGT 1 2 - 1 2 - 11 - - 27 - - - - - - 9 - - - -
AGG/CCT 5 13 1 - 4 1 8 19 - 29 37 12 - - 6 8 14 - 12 - -
CCG/CCG 1 4 - - 2 - - 10 4 - 14 - - - - - - - - - -

In the 3′UTR fraction in angiosperms and gymnosperms AAT/ATT was the most abundant trimer motif in all the genera with the exception of Eucalyptus (AAG/CTT, AGG/CTT and CCG/CCG were present in similar numbers), Fraxinus (AAT/AAT and ACT/AGT were present in similar numbers), Prunus (ACT/AGT most abundant) and Gnetum (AAG/CTT most abundant). In the 5′UTR and ORF fractions in angiosperms, AAG/CTT was the most abundant in all genera except in Betula (5′UTR; AAC/GTT and ACT/AGT were present in similar numbers), Betula (ORF; AAG/CTT, AAC/GTT and ACC/GGT were present in similar numbers), Eucalyptus (ORF; CCG/CCG most abundant), Fraxinus (ORF; AAG/CCT, ACT/AGT, AAT/ATT and ACC/GGT were present in similar numbers) and Prunus (ORF; ACT/AGT most abundant). Moreover, in the 5′UTR and ORF in gymnosperms, there was not a single trimer motif that ranked first, instead it varied across genera.

Discussion

In this study we have investigated the occurrence of EST-SSRs in three EST genomic fractions (5′UTR, ORF and 3′UTR), in a genus-wise analysis in woody trees of two taxa, angiosperms and gymnosperms. Genus-wise EST-SSRs analysis for EST genomic fractions separately supports the unequal distribution of EST-SSR motifs across the EST sequences. EST-SSR length is positively associated with genome size in gymnosperms (i.e. larger genomes have longer EST-SSRs). However, EST-SSR density is not proportional to genome size; instead other factors seem to have contributed to the EST-SSR density in gymnosperms. We observed two main differences between angiosperm and gymnosperm genera, which may reflect evolutionary differences following their divergence 350 Myr [48], such as the increased presence of hexamers and AT-rich motifs in the gymnosperm genera.

Low contribution of EST-SSRs to genome size diversity

Our EST-SSRs length values are in accordance with those previously reported in the literature [5,27,45]. In gymnosperms, we observe a positive and significant association between the EST-SSRs length and genome size. Thus, the largest genomes (Pinus and Picea) also have, on average, the longest EST-SSRs. Although this suggests a higher relaxation towards genome enlargement in those two genera, the yet small differences in length between the studied gymnosperm genera suggests that EST-SSRs length contribution to Pinus and Picea genome obesity may be only modest. Instead, EST-SSRs length has been suggested to be mainly the result of a balance between slippage events and point mutation [8], which have resulted in a rather homogeneous EST-SSRs length, as suggested before [45]. Unlike in gymnosperms, our analysis does not support an association between the EST-SSRs length and genome size in angiosperms. A potential association however could be masked by the multiple polyploidization events and their role in genome size diversification in angiosperms [49]. Although other factors may have played a role in genome size diversity in angiosperms; transposable element (TE) expansion seems to be the most determinant factor [50]. Conifer genome expansion can also be attributed to a large extent to TE expansion [51,52], although its role in genome size diversification is yet to be proven within the gymnosperm taxon.

Our values for percentage of perfect and compound EST-SSRs in Gnetum and Pinus agree with those reported by Victoria et al. [46] and are not correlated with genome size in any of the taxa. Our data also does not support the contribution of overall EST-SSRs abundance to genome size expansion. Instead, angiosperm genera with smaller genomes compared to those in gymnosperms show, on average a significantly higher abundance (four order of magnitude higher) of EST-SSRs. The lower density of EST-SSRs in gymnosperm compared to angiosperm species is in agreement with previous reports [5,45,47] and does not support a possible constant abundance of SSRs in the transcribed portions of the genome across species as suggested by Morgante et al. [4]. Several studies have concluded that EST-SSRs abundance is inversely related to the genome size [5,37], while others attribute EST-SSRs abundance partly to the action of selection and the effectiveness of mechanisms for regulating slippage errors [44,53]. Our more extensive investigation however does not support a simple linear relationship between EST-SSR abundance and genome size. For example, two gymnosperm genera such as Gnetum and Zamia have similar or even higher frequencies of SSRs than angiosperm genera such as Citrus, which has a smaller genome size. This suggests that other factors affecting genome evolution in both taxa need to be considered to explain EST-SSR abundance diversity in the plant kingdom.

EST-SSR abundance across EST fractions also differs between gymnosperm and angiosperms. In angiosperms, EST-SSRs are significantly more abundant in the 5′UTR fraction, while in gymnosperms there is on an average a higher abundance of EST-SSRs in the 3′UTR fraction. In angiosperms, a higher density of EST-SSRs in the UTR fractions has been reported previously [4,20,54,55]; while other studies support a higher abundance in the ORF fraction [44]. A higher EST-SSR abundance in the 5′UTR could be attributed to a regulatory role [56,57]. In Cryptomeria, a higher density of EST-SSRs in the ORF fraction has also been shown [37]. However, due to the limited number of studies performed on each EST fraction separately, a generalization on the relative abundance of SSRs across those fractions warrants further investigation.

Motif size: while dimers dominate, hexamers are more common in the gymnosperm EST sequences

Our study reveals an overall higher abundance of dimers across all three genomic fractions (with six exceptions). In an EST-SSRs analysis that included lower and upper plant species, Victoria et al. [46] reported that trimers are more frequent in the majority of groups of higher plants; while individual studies in angiosperm trees have shown dimers as the most abundant motif in genera such as Populus [17,45] and Eucalyptus [16,34]. In Quercus, trimers were reported as the most abundant motif in the ORF fraction, while dimers were more frequent in the UTR fractions [20]. Trimers were the most common motif in Citrus according to some studies [19,27] whereas Palmieri et al. [28] described dimers as the most abundant motifs in the same genus. In gymnosperms, a higher abundance of EST-SSR dimers has previously reported in Pinus, Picea, and Ginkgo [5,24,45,46]; while Yan et al. [47] reported trimers as the most abundant in Pinus. Similarly, trimers were the most frequent in the ORF in Pinus, while dimers were the most common in the 3′UTR fraction [43]. In agreement with our study, increased representation of trimers in the ORF was shown before in Cryptomeria [37]. Trimers and hexamers were reported to be more common in the ORF compared to the UTRs in Quercus [20] and Cryptomeria [37]. Similarly, we also observe trimers and hexamers as common in both taxa with reference to ORF.

Our data shows that despite the fact that dimers are the most frequent repeats in majority of the genera in all the three genomic fractions, the proportion of dimers to trimers (dimers/trimers) decreases significantly in the ORF fraction. Predominance of trimers in the coding regions was reported previously in animals and plants [58]. ORF enrichment in trimers is expected considering that dimers alter the frameshift (i.e., nucleotide triplet or codon is the unit for translation), which should be avoided if the correct translation of the ORF into a protein should be maintained. Presence of SSR dimers in the ORF fraction can potentially affect gene amino acid sequences consequently altering their function due to frameshift mutations, while SSRs in the UTR fractions will affect transcription, translation or splicing of gene products [8]. Moreover, if the number of dimer repeats is divisible by three, it will result in the alternation of two amino acids (e.g., (AT)6: ATA-TAT-ATA-TAT: Ile-Tyr-Ile-Tyr), thus potentially leaving the reading frame un-altered, as previously suggested by Kantety et al. in cereal species [59].

Dimer/Trimer nucleotide composition: AT-rich motifs are common in gymnosperms

Our study reveals a low abundance of AC/GT motif in all studied genera. Unlike as in mammals, the AC/GT motif is known to occur at low frequency in plants [4,60]. The difference between plants and mammals has been attributed to differences in methylation patterns. AC/GT abundance in animals was suggested as the result of transition of methylated C residue to T (CG/CG → AC/GT), while the absence of a C-hotspot in plants could have prevented the predominance of AC/GT repeats [4,60]. In agreement with previous works, the CG/CG motif (which creates CpG islands acting as regulatory elements through methylation) is almost absent in all our studied genera across all three genomic fractions. There is however an overall predominance of AG/CT (all three genomic fractions) and AAG/CTT (5′UTR and ORF) motifs in angiosperms, which are also target for methylation in plants [61]. In gymnosperms, AG/CT is also the most abundant motif in the 5′UTR and ORF fractions (with few genera where AT/AT is more abundant). In the 3′UTR regions, there is predominance of AT/AT (gymnosperms) and AAT/ATT (both taxa), which are not the target for methylation [62]. An increased content in A + T nucleotides in the 3′UTR fraction has been reported before in vertebrates [63], mammals [64], yeast [65] and Arabidopsis [4], which seems to be related to the UTR processing signal composition.

An overall predominance of AG/CT and AT/AT dimer motifs in EST sequences was supported by previous studies in angiosperms [20,34,47] and gymnosperms [5,46,47]. In angiosperms, AG/CT was reported as the most abundant in Eucalyptus [16,34,47], Citrus [26-28] and Populus [45,47,66]. In Quercus, AC/GT was shown as the most abundant dimer [20]. In agreement with an overall enrichment in AT/AT motif gymnosperms (specially in the 3′UTR fraction), other studies have also reported AT/AT as the most frequent dimer in Pinus [5,43,45-47], Picea [5,24,45] and Ginkgo [45]. Berube et al. [5] also demonstrate a similar finding with a higher abundance of AT/AT dimers in the 3′ sequenced ESTs in Pinus and Picea. The motif AG/CT was shown to be the most abundant in Cycas [45] and Gnetum [46]; the latter being also supported by our data. In Cryptomeria, AT/AT was shown to be the most abundant in the UTR fractions, while AG/CT was the most abundant in the ORF [37].

In agreement with our results, previous studies also support a higher abundance of the AAG/CTT motif in angiosperms. In gymnosperms, our study reveals predominance of the AAT/ATT motif in the 3′UTR fraction; moreover, trimer predominance in the other two fractions seems genus dependent. In angiosperms, AAG/CTT was ranked first in frequency in Eucalyptus [16,47], Citrus [26-28] and Poplar [45,47,66]. In Eucalyptus, other studies reported AGG/CCT [34] as the most abundant trimer motifs. In Quercus, AAT/ATT was shown to be the most common trimer motif [20]. In gymnosperms, AAT/ATT was shown to be the most abundant trimer in Pinus [45]. Other studies report AAG/CTT as the most common trimer in Pinus [43,47], Picea [24] and Cycas [45]. Also ACG/CGT was presented as the most abundant trimer in Pinus and Picea [5]. In Cryptomeria, our trimer motif dominance across the EST fractions corresponds with that reported by [37] (i.e., AGG, 5′UTR; AAG, ORF; AAT, 3′UTR).

Conclusions

Our EST-SSR comparative analysis in eight angiosperm genera and seven gymnosperm genera has revealed interesting differential features among both taxa. While dimers dominate, hexamers are more common in the gymnosperm EST sequences than the angiosperms, and AT-rich motifs among the dimers are the most abundant in gymnosperms. These results provide the foundation for future comparative studies at the species level to unravel the evolutionary processes that control the SSR genesis and divergence between angiosperm and gymnosperm tree species.

Methods

Genomic resources and bioinformatics

Description of the EST resources analysed in this study is represented in Additional file 1: Table S1. ESTs from 40 species from eight genera in angiosperms and 17 species from seven genera in gymnosperms were considered for the EST-SSR analysis in this study. EST sequences of the selected species were retrieved from the dbEST database of the NCBI. The criterion for species selection, analysis and the results presented in this work was based on the availability of the sequence data in the EST databank. To remove redundancy, EST sequences were assembled into contigs and singlets, species-wise, using the sequence assembly program CAP3 with its default setting [67]. For each genus, the species-wise assembled contigs and singlets were pooled together and the sequence redundancy at genus level was removed using CD-HIT [68] with a cut off value of 90% (ensuring 90% sequence identity). The ORF detection is based on the same principle as the generic eukaryotic gene prediction program used for searching the coding regions from a given nucleotide sequence. Based on the coding potential profiles trained from Angiosperms (Arabidopsis) and Gymnosperms (Norway spruce) protein coding genes, we used AUGUSTUS [69] to distinguish the coding and the UTR regions, and the coding direction of a given transcript sequence. The main feature in detecting ORF on transcript sequence is that the ORF is located in an intron-less, single exon coding region. However, due to the unexpected higher coding potential in the UTR region, one transcript might contain more than one ORF. In such cases, we have selected the longest ORF as the true coding region and the adjacent nucleotide sequence as the UTR region. Thus the longest ORF was selected from each of the EST sequence from the genus-wise collection of sequences and the 5′UTR and 3′UTR fractions of the sequence were assigned based on the coordinate direction of the ORF. Three groups of sequences were thus created with reference to each genus, namely 5′UTR, ORF and 3′UTR. SSRLocatorI v.1 [70] was used to retrieve the SSR information at the genus level from each of the three groups derived. SSRLocator was used with the following settings, SSR repeat motifs and number of repeats shown respectively, dimer-10, trimer-7, tetramer-5, pentamer-4, hexamer-4, heptamer-3, octamer-3, nonamer-3, decamer-2. The space between compound SSRs was set to 100 bp. Thus repetitions that occurred in the adjacent regions lower than 100 bp, were considered as compound SSRs. These settings are in compliance with the search parameters for repetitive elements in class I (≥20 bp) described as more efficient molecular markers followed by Temnykh et al. [71]. Mononucleotide repeats can be difficult to accurately assay and are generally eliminated from the SSR analysis [45,72-74] and consequently these repeats were excluded from this study. Therefore, in this article we discuss the occurrence of microsatellites specific to 5′UTR, ORF or 3′UTR fractions of the ESTs. While recording the count of a particular repeat motif, circular permutations and/or reverse complements of each other were clustered together (e.g. AC = GT = CA = TG, ACG = CGA = GCA = TGC = GCT = CGT = AGC = TCG = CAG = GTC = TGC = GAC and AAC = ACA = CAA = TTG = TGT = GTT) [5]. We also screened for perfect and compound SSRs. Perfect SSRs are the repeat motifs that are simple tandem sequence, without any interruptions within the repeat (e.g. TATATATATATATATA or [TA]n); while a compound SSR consists of the sequence containing two adjacent distinct SSRs separated by none to any number of base pairs (e.g. TATATATATAGTGTGTGTGT or [TA]n-[GT]n).

Statistical analysis

A non-parametric Tukey HSD test was carried to compare the means of EST-SSRs length between all categories. We carried out a 2 × 3 contingence χ2 test for heterogeneity of microsatellite counts (motif counts/total EST-fraction in Mbp) among the three EST genomic regions. Statistical analyses were all carried out using the R software package [75].

Acknowledgements

SSR salary was supported by the Faculty of Forest Science, SLU, Umeå, Sweden. Travel cost for SSR was covered by the travel grant from FORMAS. YCL was supported by the Wallenbergs Stiftelse, Norway spruce genome project. YCL and YVdP were supported by Ghent University Multidisciplinary Research Partnerships “Bioinformatics: from nucleotides to networks”. Authors acknowledge the support of computational resources from Norway spruce genome consortium.

Abbreviations

SSR

Simple sequence repeats

EST

Expressed sequence tags

UTR

Untranslated region

ORF

Open reading frame

Myr

Million years

TE

Transposable element

Additional file

Additional file 1: Table S1. (56KB, docx)

EST database size, number of nucleotides used for SSR analysis and counts of repeat motifs per Mbp in each fraction: (a) Angiosperms and (b) Gymnosperms. Table S2 SSR motif complexity in: (a) Angiosperms and (b) Gymnosperms.

Footnotes

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

Authors’ contributions

SSR was involved in the design of the study and manuscript writing. SSR performed the bioinformatics analysis. MRGG was involved in the design of the study and manuscript writing. MRGG was responsible of the statistical analyses. YCL, AZ and YVdP contributed to the bioinformatics work. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Contributor Information

Sonali Sachin Ranade, Email: Sonali.Ranade@slu.se.

Yao-Cheng Lin, Email: yao-cheng.lin@psb.vib-ugent.be.

Andrea Zuccolo, Email: azuccolo@appliedgenomics.org.

Yves Van de Peer, Email: yves.vandepeer@psb.vib-ugent.be.

María del Rosario García-Gil, Email: M.Rosario.Garcia@slu.se.

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