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Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae

BACKGROUND: The Apiaceae family includes several vegetable and spice crop species among which carrot is the most economically important member, with ~21 million tons produced yearly worldwide. Despite its importance, molecular resources in this species are relatively underdeveloped. The availability...

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Autores principales: Cavagnaro, Pablo F, Chung, Sang-Min, Manin, Sylvie, Yildiz, Mehtap, Ali, Aamir, Alessandro, Maria S, Iorizzo, Massimo, Senalik, Douglas A, Simon, Philipp W
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3162538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21806822
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-386
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author Cavagnaro, Pablo F
Chung, Sang-Min
Manin, Sylvie
Yildiz, Mehtap
Ali, Aamir
Alessandro, Maria S
Iorizzo, Massimo
Senalik, Douglas A
Simon, Philipp W
author_facet Cavagnaro, Pablo F
Chung, Sang-Min
Manin, Sylvie
Yildiz, Mehtap
Ali, Aamir
Alessandro, Maria S
Iorizzo, Massimo
Senalik, Douglas A
Simon, Philipp W
author_sort Cavagnaro, Pablo F
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Apiaceae family includes several vegetable and spice crop species among which carrot is the most economically important member, with ~21 million tons produced yearly worldwide. Despite its importance, molecular resources in this species are relatively underdeveloped. The availability of informative, polymorphic, and robust PCR-based markers, such as microsatellites (or SSRs), will facilitate genetics and breeding of carrot and other Apiaceae, including integration of linkage maps, tagging of phenotypic traits and assisting positional gene cloning. Thus, with the purpose of isolating carrot microsatellites, two different strategies were used; a hybridization-based library enrichment for SSRs, and bioinformatic mining of SSRs in BAC-end sequence and EST sequence databases. This work reports on the development of 300 carrot SSR markers and their characterization at various levels. RESULTS: Evaluation of microsatellites isolated from both DNA sources in subsets of 7 carrot F(2 )mapping populations revealed that SSRs from the hybridization-based method were longer, had more repeat units and were more polymorphic than SSRs isolated by sequence search. Overall, 196 SSRs (65.1%) were polymorphic in at least one mapping population, and the percentage of polymophic SSRs across F(2 )populations ranged from 17.8 to 24.7. Polymorphic markers in one family were evaluated in the entire F(2), allowing the genetic mapping of 55 SSRs (38 codominant) onto the carrot reference map. The SSR loci were distributed throughout all 9 carrot linkage groups (LGs), with 2 to 9 SSRs/LG. In addition, SSR evaluations in carrot-related taxa indicated that a significant fraction of the carrot SSRs transfer successfully across Apiaceae, with heterologous amplification success rate decreasing with the target-species evolutionary distance from carrot. SSR diversity evaluated in a collection of 65 D. carota accessions revealed a high level of polymorphism for these selected loci, with an average of 19 alleles/locus and 0.84 expected heterozygosity. CONCLUSIONS: The addition of 55 SSRs to the carrot map, together with marker characterizations in six other mapping populations, will facilitate future comparative mapping studies and integration of carrot maps. The markers developed herein will be a valuable resource for assisting breeding, genetic, diversity, and genomic studies of carrot and other Apiaceae.
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spelling pubmed-31625382011-08-27 Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae Cavagnaro, Pablo F Chung, Sang-Min Manin, Sylvie Yildiz, Mehtap Ali, Aamir Alessandro, Maria S Iorizzo, Massimo Senalik, Douglas A Simon, Philipp W BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: The Apiaceae family includes several vegetable and spice crop species among which carrot is the most economically important member, with ~21 million tons produced yearly worldwide. Despite its importance, molecular resources in this species are relatively underdeveloped. The availability of informative, polymorphic, and robust PCR-based markers, such as microsatellites (or SSRs), will facilitate genetics and breeding of carrot and other Apiaceae, including integration of linkage maps, tagging of phenotypic traits and assisting positional gene cloning. Thus, with the purpose of isolating carrot microsatellites, two different strategies were used; a hybridization-based library enrichment for SSRs, and bioinformatic mining of SSRs in BAC-end sequence and EST sequence databases. This work reports on the development of 300 carrot SSR markers and their characterization at various levels. RESULTS: Evaluation of microsatellites isolated from both DNA sources in subsets of 7 carrot F(2 )mapping populations revealed that SSRs from the hybridization-based method were longer, had more repeat units and were more polymorphic than SSRs isolated by sequence search. Overall, 196 SSRs (65.1%) were polymorphic in at least one mapping population, and the percentage of polymophic SSRs across F(2 )populations ranged from 17.8 to 24.7. Polymorphic markers in one family were evaluated in the entire F(2), allowing the genetic mapping of 55 SSRs (38 codominant) onto the carrot reference map. The SSR loci were distributed throughout all 9 carrot linkage groups (LGs), with 2 to 9 SSRs/LG. In addition, SSR evaluations in carrot-related taxa indicated that a significant fraction of the carrot SSRs transfer successfully across Apiaceae, with heterologous amplification success rate decreasing with the target-species evolutionary distance from carrot. SSR diversity evaluated in a collection of 65 D. carota accessions revealed a high level of polymorphism for these selected loci, with an average of 19 alleles/locus and 0.84 expected heterozygosity. CONCLUSIONS: The addition of 55 SSRs to the carrot map, together with marker characterizations in six other mapping populations, will facilitate future comparative mapping studies and integration of carrot maps. The markers developed herein will be a valuable resource for assisting breeding, genetic, diversity, and genomic studies of carrot and other Apiaceae. BioMed Central 2011-08-01 /pmc/articles/PMC3162538/ /pubmed/21806822 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-386 Text en Copyright ©2011 Cavagnaro 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 Research Article
Cavagnaro, Pablo F
Chung, Sang-Min
Manin, Sylvie
Yildiz, Mehtap
Ali, Aamir
Alessandro, Maria S
Iorizzo, Massimo
Senalik, Douglas A
Simon, Philipp W
Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae
title Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae
title_full Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae
title_fullStr Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae
title_full_unstemmed Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae
title_short Microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across Apiaceae
title_sort microsatellite isolation and marker development in carrot - genomic distribution, linkage mapping, genetic diversity analysis and marker transferability across apiaceae
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3162538/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21806822
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-12-386
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