Showing posts with label plant. Show all posts
Showing posts with label plant. Show all posts

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.

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