Genotyping by Sequencing (GBS) Expert Service

Our mission is to ensure the generation of accurate and precise findings.

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Genotyping by Sequencing
Experts

We specialise in delivering high quality, consistent GBS data sets
to collaborators around the world.

PLOS One Open Access Peer Reviewed Research Article

6758

GBS Paper Citations

103

Species Analysed

Flag of New Zealand

25

Countries

World Map Shades of Blue

6

Continents

What our collaborators say about our genotyping-by-sequencing service.

A selection of species we have worked with.

plant breeding, SNP Genotyping, Genotyping Services,Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) Analysis
Capsicum anuum

Capsicum

Horticulture Breeding

Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS), GBS Service, DNA Sequence Variation
Zea mays

Maize

Agriculture Breeding

Domestic chickens, Variant Calling, Genomic Profiling
Gallus gallus

Chicken

Animal Breeding

SNP Discovery, High-Quality Genotyping
Impatiens capensis

Orange Jewelweed

Plant Ecology

Single Nucleotide Polymorphism (SNP) Analysis
Thinornis novaeseelandiae

Tūturuatu / Shore Plover

Avian Conservation Biology

Mammalian Genotyping, Easy to use, Cost Effective
Procavia capensis

Rock Hyrax

Mammalian Ecology

Genomic Data Analysis, Population Genetics Studies, Genetic Testing Services
Carum carvi

Caraway

Orphan Crop Breeding

Insect genomics, SNP Discovery, Genomic Research Service
Tipulidae spp.

Cranefly

Insect Ecology

Aquatic Diversite, Mollusc, DNA Sequence Variation, Genotyping by Sequencing
Tridacna maxima

Cook Island Clam

Molluscan Ecology

What is Genotyping by Sequencing?

Genotyping-by-Sequencing (GBS) is a method for molecular marker discovery and genotyping which is widely used in many areas of genomics research. Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) allows the simultaneous discovery and genotyping of thousands to millions of single nucleotide polymorphisms depending on the genetic diversity sampled. It was first developed to provide a low cost, high throughput genetic marker platform for plant breeding in corn by Rob Elshire and his colleagues at Cornell University.

That was just the beginning. In addition to agricultural applications, genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) has enabled the use of modern genomics tools for researchers in fields such as ecology and conservation biology. This system can be used without a reference genome and is ideal for non-model organisms. Working with Rob Elshire, the original developer, on your genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) project is easy, go to our services page to find out more and our contact page to get the process started.

How does it work?

Genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) combines the data generation power of modern DNA sequencing with long used and well known molecular biology techniques in a streamlined method to generate many molecular markers. To take advantage of the huge amount of sequence data generated by modern sequencing and reduce the cost per sample, genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS) uses an efficient DNA bar coding system which allows us to combine many samples for sequencing.

5 Main Steps

  1. Cut up the DNA into fragments in a predictable way using methylation sensitive restriction enzymes. One can think of these as very specialised molecular scissors.

  2. Attach specially designed DNA molecules (incorporating bar codes) to the cut DNA using DNA ligase. Ligase can be thought of as glue or sellotape.

  3. Make many, many copies of the DNA molecules using a DNA polymerase to make a library — much like a copy machine.

  4. Sequence the library thereby generating a large data set.

  5. Perform an analysis of the data comparing the sequences and looking for differences. These differences are genetic markers