Transcriptome-wide selection of a reliable set of reference genes for gene expression studies in potato cyst nematodes (globodera spp.)

Citation

Sabeh, M., Duceppe, M.O., St-Arnaud, M., Mimee, B. (2018). Transcriptome-wide selection of a reliable set of reference genes for gene expression studies in potato cyst nematodes (globodera spp.). PLoS ONE, [online] 13(3), http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193840

Plain language summary

In order to know if a gene is active (transcribed), scientists measure “gene expression”. To do that, an internal control called a “reference gene” is needed to compare the expression of a gene of interest. A perfect reference gene should have a constant expression level under all the experimental conditions. Using different techniques, we have identified valid reference genes for the potato cyst nematode. These references will now allow the realization of gene expression studies on this important pest of potato in order to find new control methods.

Abstract

Relative gene expression analyses by qRT-PCR (quantitative reverse transcription PCR) require an internal control to normalize the expression data of genes of interest and eliminate the unwanted variation introduced by sample preparation. A perfect reference gene should have a constant expression level under all the experimental conditions. However, the same few housekeeping genes selected from the literature or successfully used in previous unrelated experiments are often routinely used in new conditions without proper validation of their stability across treatments. The advent of RNA-Seq and the availability of public datasets for numerous organisms are opening the way to finding better reference genes for expression studies. Globodera rostochiensis is a plant-parasitic nematode that is particularly yield-limiting for potato. The aim of our study was to identify a reliable set of reference genes to study G. rostochiensis gene expression. Gene expression levels from an RNA-Seq database were used to identify putative reference genes and were validated with qRT-PCR analysis. Three genes, GR, PMP-3, and aaRS, were found to be very stable within the experimental conditions of this study and are proposed as reference genes for future work.

Publication date

2018-03-01

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