EST-SSR: A new class of genetic markers in cotton.

Publication Overview
TitleEST-SSR: A new class of genetic markers in cotton.
AuthorsQureshi SN; Saha S; Kantety RV; Jenkins JN
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameJournal of Cotton Science
Volume8
Year2004
Page(s)112 123
Publication CodeJCS-8-112

Abstract

Recent advances in genomic technologies have generated a large number of expressed sequence tags (ESTs) in cotton. Many of these ESTs are available in public databases, which offer an opportunity to identify simple sequence repeats (SSR) in ESTs by data mining. These sequences may provide an estimate of diversity in the expressed portion of the genome and may be useful for comparative mapping, for tagging important traits of interest, and for additional map-based cloning of important genes. One hundred and thirty-three SSR-containing ESTs (EST-SSRs) were identified by analyzing 9,948 sequences belonging to Gossypium hirsutum L. in GenBank. The EST-SSR sequences and the related EST sequences without SSRs were clustered to reduce redundancy and to develop consensus sequences. Primers were designed for 84 of these EST-SSRs and were tested for their ability to amplify and detect diversity among three lines of G. hirsutum and one line of G. barbadense L. An average of three amplicons was obtained per primer pair. The intraspecies polymorphism rate among the G. hirsutum cotton cultivars was 26\\% and interspecific polymorphism between G. hirsutum and G. barbadense was 52\\%. The presence of SSRs in the EST-SSR markers was confirmed by cloning and sequencing of the amplified products of randomly selected primer pairs from four different lines. To explore the potential use of the EST-SSR loci for comparative mapping, these sequences were compared against different plant species using BLAST assuming an e-value of 1E-10 or less as a significant sequence similarity. About 74\\% of the EST-SSRs were from fiber-related tissues in G. hirsutum, whereas 26\\% were from other tissues, such as cotton bolls and cottonseed. Fifty-five percent of these EST-SSR sequences matched sequences in G. arboretum L., and 19\\% of the sequences showed considerable sequence similarity with sequences in the Arabidopsis thaliana (L.) Heynh. genome. In this manuscript, information about the primer sequence, repeat motif, and the degree of polymorphism of cotton EST-SSR markers is reported. A cost-effective strategy to develop EST-SSR markers by exploiting EST databases is demonstrated for the first time in cotton.
Features
This publication contains information about 84 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
MGHES0010MGHES0010genetic_marker
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MGHES0011BMGHES0011Bgenetic_marker
MGHES0012MGHES0012genetic_marker
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MGHES0015MGHES0015genetic_marker
MGHES0016MGHES0016genetic_marker
MGHES0017MGHES0017genetic_marker
MGHES0018MGHES0018genetic_marker
MGHES0019MGHES0019genetic_marker
MGHES0001AMGHES0001Agenetic_marker
MGHES0001BMGHES0001Bgenetic_marker
MGHES0002MGHES0002genetic_marker
MGHES0020MGHES0020genetic_marker
MGHES0021MGHES0021genetic_marker
MGHES0022MGHES0022genetic_marker
MGHES0023MGHES0023genetic_marker
MGHES0024MGHES0024genetic_marker
MGHES0025MGHES0025genetic_marker
MGHES0026MGHES0026genetic_marker
MGHES0027MGHES0027genetic_marker
MGHES0028MGHES0028genetic_marker
MGHES0029MGHES0029genetic_marker
MGHES0003MGHES0003genetic_marker

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
LanguageEnglish
Journal CodeJCS
pISSN1523-6919
URLhttp://www.cotton.org/journal/
eISSN1524-3303
Journal AliasThe journal of cotton science
PublisherThe Cotton Foundation
Published LocationUnited States
Publication CodeJCS-8-112
KeywordsGossypium hirsutum; Gossypium barbadense; genetic markers; expressed sequence tags; microsatellite repeats; DNA primers; genetic variation; genetic polymorphism; sequence homology; genomics; gene banks; databases; cotton