Development of type I genetic markers from expressedsequence tags in highly polymorphic species
2011
Expressed sequence tag (EST) databases provide
a primary source of nuclear DNA sequences for genetic
marker development in non-model organisms. To date, the
process has been relatively inefficient for several reasons:
- 1) priming site polymorphism in the template leads to
inferior or erratic amplification; - 2) introns in the target
amplicon are too large and/or numerous to allow effective
amplification under standard screening conditions, and; - 3) at least occasionally, a PCR primer straddles an exon–intron junction and is unable to bind to genomic DNA template.
The first is only a minor issue for species or strains with
low heterozygosity but becomes a significant problem for
species with high genomic variation, such as marine
organisms with extremely large effective population sizes.
Problems arising from unanticipated introns are unavoidable
but are most pronounced in intron-rich species, such as
vertebrates and lophotrochozoans. We present an approach
to marker development in the Pacific oyster Crassostrea
gigas, a highly polymorphic and intron-rich species, which
minimizes these problems, and should be applicable to
other non-model species for which EST databases are available. Placement of PCR primers in the 3′ end of coding
sequence and 3′ UTR improved PCR success rate from
51% to 97%. Almost all (37 of 39) markers developed for
the Pacific oyster were polymorphic in a small test panel of
wild and domesticated oysters.
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