New Dinucleotide and Trinucleotide Microsatellite Marker Resources for Cotton Genome Research.

Publication Overview
TitleNew Dinucleotide and Trinucleotide Microsatellite Marker Resources for Cotton Genome Research.
AuthorsReddy OUK; Pepper AE; Abdurakhmonov I; Saha S; Jenkins JN; Brooks T; Bolek Y; El-Zik KM
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameJournal of Cotton Science
Volume5
Year2001
Page(s)103 113
CitationReddy O, Pepper A, Abdurakhmonov I, Saha S, Jenkins J, Brooks T, Bolek Y, El-Zik K. New dinucleotide and trinucleotide microsatellite marker resources for cotton genome research. Journal of cotton science. 2001; 5(2):103-113
Publication CodeJCS-5-103

Abstract

A collaborative multi-institutional program was initiated to streamline the process of microsatellite capture and characterization, development of microsatellites into informative molecular markers, and dissemination of marker information to the cotton research community. A simple and efficient biotin capture method was optimized and used to capture more than 10,000 fragments. Out of 588 fragments sequenced, nearly all contained a microsatellite repeat structure. Several repeat types were represented, including AGA, GA, CA, and ACA. Primers were designed to amplify 307 unique microsatellite loci (305 nuclear and two chloroplast-encoded). One hundred fifty-two microsatellite loci were amplified from G. hirsutum L. cv. TM-1 and Tamcot SP37, and G. barbadense L. cv. Pima 3-79 and Pima S-7. In this comparison, 74 of the primers (approximately 49\\% of the subset) showed detectable polymorphism. In a comparison of upland G. hirsutum cultivars, approximately 26\\% of the primers exhibited intraspecific polymorphism. Polymorphism was widely distributed among the various repeat types and structures (e.g., imperfect and compound repeats). Redundancy with two other previously derived microsatellite marker sets (BNL, CM) was low, implying that the total pool of microsatellites present in the cotton genome is large enough to satisfy the requirements of extensive genome mapping and marker-assisted selection projects.
Features
This publication contains information about 309 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
JESPR0078JESPR0078genetic_marker
JESPR0079JESPR0079genetic_marker
JESPR0080JESPR0080genetic_marker
JESPR0081JESPR0081genetic_marker
JESPR0082JESPR0082genetic_marker
JESPR0083JESPR0083genetic_marker
JESPR0084JESPR0084genetic_marker
JESPR0085JESPR0085genetic_marker
JESPR0086JESPR0086genetic_marker
JESPR0087JESPR0087genetic_marker
JESPR0088JESPR0088genetic_marker
JESPR0089JESPR0089genetic_marker
JESPR0090JESPR0090genetic_marker
JESPR0091JESPR0091genetic_marker
JESPR0092JESPR0092genetic_marker
JESPR0093JESPR0093genetic_marker
JESPR0094JESPR0094genetic_marker
JESPR0095JESPR0095genetic_marker
JESPR0096JESPR0096genetic_marker
JESPR0097JESPR0097genetic_marker
JESPR0098JESPR0098genetic_marker
JESPR0099JESPR0099genetic_marker
JESPR0100JESPR0100genetic_marker
JESPR0101JESPR0101genetic_marker
JESPR0102JESPR0102genetic_marker

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Publication Date2001
Language Abbreng
Publication Model[electronic resource].
Journal AbbreviationJ. cotton sci.
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/10113/2837
pISSN1523-6919
Publication CodeJCS-5-103
Published LocationUnited States
eISSN1524-3303
Journal AliasThe journal of cotton science
Journal CodeJCS
LanguageEnglish
KeywordsGossypium barbadense, microsatellite repeats, genomics, molecular markers, gossypium hirsutum; gossypium barbadense; microsatellites; genome analysis; microsatellite repeats; genomics