Abstract
Background:
Modern plant breeding strategies rely on the intensive use of advanced genomic tools to expedite the development of improved crop varieties. Genomic DNA extraction from crop seeds eliminates the need to grow plants in contrast to fresh leaf tissue; however, it can still be a bottleneck due to the presence of stored compounds and the complexity of the matrix. The interaction of environmentally benign choline-based ionic liquids (ILs) with DNA offers an innovative approach to enhance the quality of extracted DNA from seeds. While prior IL-based plant DNA extraction workflows have primarily supported polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and quantitative PCR-based applications, their suitability for high-throughput sequencing (HTS) remained largely unexplored. This study explores the efficacy of IL-assisted method for genomic DNA extraction from soybean (Glycine max) seeds, addressing the limited application of ILs in HTS.
Results:
The optimized DNA extraction method, utilizing 25% (w/v) choline formate, enabled the recovery of high-purity DNA with abundant fragment sizes > 20 kb, suitable for downstream applications including PCR, whole genome amplification (WGA), simple sequence repeat (SSR) amplification, and high-throughput Illumina sequencing. The IL-method was benchmarked against a silica-binding method using cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) and sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) as lysis agents using a commercial plant DNA extraction kit in terms of DNA yield, purity, abundant DNA fragment size distribution, and integrity. In addition, DNA isolated from this method demonstrated successful PCR amplification of markers from both the nuclear and plastid genomes and yielded > 99% whole genome coverage with Illumina (PE150) sequencing reads.
Conclusions:
This is the first known instance of a whole genome sequence generated from DNA extracted with ILs. These findings mark a significant milestone in establishing ILs as promising alternatives to conventional methods for seed DNA extraction, with potential utility in third generation (long-read) sequencing experiments.
Keywords:
High-molecular weight DNA; High-throughput sequencing; Ionic liquids; Plant breeding; Seed DNA; Soybean.
