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Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species

BACKGROUND: Transposons constitute the major fractions of repetitive sequences in eukaryotes, and have been crucial in the shaping of current genomes. Transposons are generally divided into two classes according to the mechanism underlying their transposition: RNA intermediate class 1 and DNA interm...

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Autores principales: Kwon, Soon-Jae, Park, Kyong-Chul, Kim, Jin-Hong, Lee, Ju Kyong, Kim, Nam-Soo
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1079816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15766385
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-6-15
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author Kwon, Soon-Jae
Park, Kyong-Chul
Kim, Jin-Hong
Lee, Ju Kyong
Kim, Nam-Soo
author_facet Kwon, Soon-Jae
Park, Kyong-Chul
Kim, Jin-Hong
Lee, Ju Kyong
Kim, Nam-Soo
author_sort Kwon, Soon-Jae
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Transposons constitute the major fractions of repetitive sequences in eukaryotes, and have been crucial in the shaping of current genomes. Transposons are generally divided into two classes according to the mechanism underlying their transposition: RNA intermediate class 1 and DNA intermediate class 2. CACTA is a class 2 transposon superfamily, which is found exclusively in plants. As some transposons, including the CACTA superfamily, are highly abundant in plant species, and their nucleotide sequences are highly conserved within a family, they can be utilized as genetic markers, using a slightly modified version of the conventional AFLP protocol. Rim2 /Hipa is a CACTA transposon family having 16 bp consensus TIR sequences to be present in high copy numbers in rice genome. This research was carried out in order to develop a Rim2/Hipa CACTA-AFLP or Rim2/Hipa CACTA-TD (transposon display, hereafter Rim2/Hipa-TD) protocol for the study of genetic markers in map construction and the study of genetic diversity in rice. RESULTS: Rim2/Hipa-TD generated ample polymorphic profiles among the different rice accessions, and the amplification profiles were highly reproducible between different thermocyclers and Taq polymerases. These amplification profiles allowed for clear distinction between two different ecotypes, Japonica and Indica, of Oryza sativa. In the analysis of RIL populations, the Rim2/Hipa-TD markers were found to be segregated largely in a dominant manner, although in a few cases, non-parental bands were observed in the segregating populations. Upon linkage analysis, the Rim2/Hipa-TD markers were found to be distributed in the regions proximal to the centromeres of the chromosomes. The distribution of the Rim2/Hipa CACTA elements was surveyed in 15 different Oryza species via Rim2/Hipa-TD. While Rim2/Hipa-TD yielded ample amplification profiles between 100 to 700 bp in the AA diploid Oryza species, other species having BB, CC, EE, BBCC and CCDD, profiles demonstrated that most of the amplified fragments were larger than 400 bp, and that our methods were insufficient to clearly distinguish between these fragments. However, the overall amplification profiles between species in the Oryza genus were fully distinct. Phenetic relationships among the AA diploid Oryza species, as evidenced by the Rim2/Hipa-TD markers, were matched with their geographical distributions. CONCLUSION: The abundance of the Rim2/Hipa TIR sequences is very informative since the Rim2/Hipa-TD produced high polymorphic profiles with ample reproducibility within a species as well as between species in the Oryza genus. Therefore, Rim2/Hipa-TD markers can be useful in the development of high-density of genetic map around the centromeric regions. Rim2/Hipa-TD may also prove useful in evaluations of genetic variation and species relationships in the Oryza species.
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spelling pubmed-10798162005-04-15 Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species Kwon, Soon-Jae Park, Kyong-Chul Kim, Jin-Hong Lee, Ju Kyong Kim, Nam-Soo BMC Genet Methodology Article BACKGROUND: Transposons constitute the major fractions of repetitive sequences in eukaryotes, and have been crucial in the shaping of current genomes. Transposons are generally divided into two classes according to the mechanism underlying their transposition: RNA intermediate class 1 and DNA intermediate class 2. CACTA is a class 2 transposon superfamily, which is found exclusively in plants. As some transposons, including the CACTA superfamily, are highly abundant in plant species, and their nucleotide sequences are highly conserved within a family, they can be utilized as genetic markers, using a slightly modified version of the conventional AFLP protocol. Rim2 /Hipa is a CACTA transposon family having 16 bp consensus TIR sequences to be present in high copy numbers in rice genome. This research was carried out in order to develop a Rim2/Hipa CACTA-AFLP or Rim2/Hipa CACTA-TD (transposon display, hereafter Rim2/Hipa-TD) protocol for the study of genetic markers in map construction and the study of genetic diversity in rice. RESULTS: Rim2/Hipa-TD generated ample polymorphic profiles among the different rice accessions, and the amplification profiles were highly reproducible between different thermocyclers and Taq polymerases. These amplification profiles allowed for clear distinction between two different ecotypes, Japonica and Indica, of Oryza sativa. In the analysis of RIL populations, the Rim2/Hipa-TD markers were found to be segregated largely in a dominant manner, although in a few cases, non-parental bands were observed in the segregating populations. Upon linkage analysis, the Rim2/Hipa-TD markers were found to be distributed in the regions proximal to the centromeres of the chromosomes. The distribution of the Rim2/Hipa CACTA elements was surveyed in 15 different Oryza species via Rim2/Hipa-TD. While Rim2/Hipa-TD yielded ample amplification profiles between 100 to 700 bp in the AA diploid Oryza species, other species having BB, CC, EE, BBCC and CCDD, profiles demonstrated that most of the amplified fragments were larger than 400 bp, and that our methods were insufficient to clearly distinguish between these fragments. However, the overall amplification profiles between species in the Oryza genus were fully distinct. Phenetic relationships among the AA diploid Oryza species, as evidenced by the Rim2/Hipa-TD markers, were matched with their geographical distributions. CONCLUSION: The abundance of the Rim2/Hipa TIR sequences is very informative since the Rim2/Hipa-TD produced high polymorphic profiles with ample reproducibility within a species as well as between species in the Oryza genus. Therefore, Rim2/Hipa-TD markers can be useful in the development of high-density of genetic map around the centromeric regions. Rim2/Hipa-TD may also prove useful in evaluations of genetic variation and species relationships in the Oryza species. BioMed Central 2005-03-14 /pmc/articles/PMC1079816/ /pubmed/15766385 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-6-15 Text en Copyright © 2005 Kwon et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology Article
Kwon, Soon-Jae
Park, Kyong-Chul
Kim, Jin-Hong
Lee, Ju Kyong
Kim, Nam-Soo
Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species
title Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species
title_full Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species
title_fullStr Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species
title_full_unstemmed Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species
title_short Rim 2/Hipa CACTA transposon display ; A new genetic marker technique in Oryza species
title_sort rim 2/hipa cacta transposon display ; a new genetic marker technique in oryza species
topic Methodology Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1079816/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15766385
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2156-6-15
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