Saturday, 12 March 2011

The Tea Transcriptome


The Tea Transcriptome


Tea is one of the most popular non-alcoholic beverages worldwide. However, the tea plant, Camellia sinensis, is difficult to culture in vitro, to transform, and has a large genome, rendering little genomic information available. Recent advances in large-scale RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) provide a fast, cost-effective, and reliable approach to generate large expression datasets for functional genomic analysis, which is especially suitable for non-model species with un-sequenced genomes. Using high-throughput Illumina RNA-seq, the transcriptome from C. sinensis was analyzed at an unprecedented depth.
(read more… )
Shi C et al. (2011) Deep sequencing of the Camellia sinensis transcriptome revealed candidate genes for major metabolic pathways of tea-specific compoundsBMC Genomics [Epub ahead of print]. [article]
The Tea Transcriptome is a post from: RNA-Seq Blog More information about RNA-Seq can be here.

1 comment:

Datanami, Woe be me