Comparative and Functional Genomics
Volume 2007 (2007), Article ID 35604, 7 pages
doi:10.1155/2007/35604
Research Article
An Integrated Pipeline of Open Source Software Adapted for Multi-CPU Architectures: Use in the Large-Scale Identification of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms
1Bioinformatics Unit, GT-Biotechnology, International Corps Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Patancheru 502324, India
2Advanced Technology Centre, Tata Consultancy Services, Madhapur, Hyderabad 500081, India
3Applied Genomics Laboratory, GT-Biotechnology, International Corps Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics, Patancheru 502324, India
4Novell IDE, Bangalore 560068, India
Received 2 May 2007; Revised 20 July 2007; Accepted 19 October 2007
Recommended by Peter Little
Abstract
The large amounts of EST sequence data available from a
single species of an organism as well as for several species
within a genus provide an easy source of identification of
intra- and interspecies single nucleotide polymorphisms
(SNPs). In the case of model organisms, the data available are
numerous, given the degree of redundancy in the deposited EST
data. There are several available bioinformatics tools that
can be used to mine this data; however, using them requires a
certain level of expertise: the tools have to be used
sequentially with accompanying format conversion and steps
like clustering and assembly of sequences become
time-intensive jobs even for moderately sized datasets. We
report here a pipeline of open source software extended to run
on multiple CPU architectures that can be used to mine large
EST datasets for SNPs and identify restriction sites for
assaying the SNPs so that cost-effective CAPS assays can be
developed for SNP genotyping in genetics and breeding
applications. At the International Crops Research Institute for
the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), the pipeline has been
implemented to run on a Paracel high-performance system
consisting of four dual AMD Opteron processors running Linux
with MPICH. The pipeline can be accessed through user-friendly
web interfaces at http://hpc.icrisat.cgiar.org/PBSWeb and is
available on request for academic use. We have validated the
developed pipeline by mining chickpea ESTs for interspecies
SNPs, development of CAPS assays for SNP genotyping, and
confirmation of restriction digestion pattern at the sequence
level.