The development of BAC-end sequence-based microsatellite markers and placement in the physical and genetic maps of soybean

被引:0
|
作者
Jeffry L. Shultz
Samreen Kazi
Rabia Bashir
Jawaad A. Afzal
David A. Lightfoot
机构
[1] Southern Illinois University at Carbondale,Genomics Core Facility and Center of Excellence in Soybean Research, Teaching and Outreach, and Department of Plant, Soil and Agricultural Systems
[2] United States Department of Agriculture,undefined
来源
关键词
Microsatellite; Motif; Repeat; Soybean; Legume; Physical map;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The composite map of soybean shared among Soybase, LIS and SoyGD (March 2006) contained 3,073 DNA markers in the “Locus” class. Among the markers were 1,019 class I microsatellite markers with 2–3 bp simple sequence repeats (SSRs) of >10 iterations (BARC-SSR markers). However, there were few class II SSRs (2–5 bp repeats with <10 iterations; mostly SIUC-Satt markers). The aims here were to increase the number of classes I and II SSR markers and to integrate bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones onto the soybean physical map using the markers. Used was 10 Mb of BAC-end sequence (BES) derived from 13,473 reads from 7,050 clones constituting minimum tile path 2 of the soybean physical map (http://www.soybeangenome.siu.edu; SoyGD). Identified were 1,053 1–6 bp motif, repeat sequences, 333 from class I (>10 repeats) and 720 from class II (<10 repeats). Potential markers were shown on the MTP_SSR track at Gbrowse. Primers were designed as 20–24 bp oligomers that had Tm of 55 ± 1 C that would generate 100–500 bp amplicons. About 853 useful primer pairs were established. Motifs were not randomly distributed with biases toward AT rich motifs. Strong biases against the GC motif and all tetra-nucleotide repeats were found. The markers discovered were useful. Among the first 135 targeted for use in genetic map improvement about 60% of class II markers and 75% of class I markers were polymorphic among on the parents of four recombinant inbred line (RIL) populations. Many of the BES-based SSRs were located on the soybean genetic map in regions with few BARC-SSR markers. Therefore, BES-based SSRs represent useful tools for genetic map development in soybean. New members of a consortium to map the markers in additional populations are invited.
引用
收藏
页码:1081 / 1090
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] The development of BAC-end sequence-based microsatellite markers and placement in the physical and genetic maps of soybean
    Shultz, Jevry L.
    Kazi, Samreen
    Bashir, Rabia
    Afzal, Jawaad A.
    Lightfoot, David A.
    [J]. THEORETICAL AND APPLIED GENETICS, 2007, 114 (06) : 1081 - 1090
  • [2] BAC-end sequence-based SNPs and Bin mapping for rapid integration of physical and genetic maps in apple
    Han, Yuepeng
    Chagne, David
    Gasic, Ksenija
    Rikkerink, Erik H. A.
    Beever, Jonathan E.
    Gardiner, Susan E.
    Korban, Schuyler S.
    [J]. GENOMICS, 2009, 93 (03) : 282 - 288
  • [3] Microsatellite discovery from BAC end sequences and genetic mapping to anchor the soybean physical and genetic maps
    Shoemaker, Randy C.
    Grant, David
    Olson, Terry
    Warren, Wesley C.
    Wing, Rod
    Yu, Yeisoo
    Kim, HyeRan
    Cregan, Perry
    Joseph, Bindu
    Futrell-Griggs, Montona
    Nelson, Will
    Davito, Jon
    Walker, Jason
    Wallis, John
    Kremitski, Colin
    Scheer, Debbie
    Clifton, Sandra W.
    Graves, Tina
    Nguyen, Henry
    Wu, Xiaolei
    Luo, Mingcheng
    Dvorak, Jan
    Nelson, Rex
    Cannon, Steven
    Tomkins, Jeff
    Schmutz, Jeremy
    Stacey, Gary
    Jackson, Scott
    [J]. GENOME, 2008, 51 (04) : 294 - 302
  • [4] Dynamic genetic features of chromosomes revealed by comparison of soybean genetic and sequence-based physical maps
    Lee, Woo Kyu
    Kim, Namshin
    Kim, Jiwoong
    Moon, Jung-Kyung
    Jeong, Namhee
    Choi, Ik-Young
    Kim, Sang Cheol
    Chung, Won-Hyong
    Kim, Hong Sig
    Lee, Suk-Ha
    Jeong, Soon-Chun
    [J]. THEORETICAL AND APPLIED GENETICS, 2013, 126 (04) : 1103 - 1119
  • [5] Dynamic genetic features of chromosomes revealed by comparison of soybean genetic and sequence-based physical maps
    Woo Kyu Lee
    Namshin Kim
    Jiwoong Kim
    Jung-Kyung Moon
    Namhee Jeong
    Ik-Young Choi
    Sang Cheol Kim
    Won-Hyong Chung
    Hong Sig Kim
    Suk-Ha Lee
    Soon-Chun Jeong
    [J]. Theoretical and Applied Genetics, 2013, 126 : 1103 - 1119
  • [6] Soybean genomic survey: BAC-end sequences near RFLP and SSR markers
    Marek, LF
    Mudge, J
    Darnielle, L
    Grant, D
    Hanson, N
    Paz, M
    Yan, HH
    Denny, R
    Larson, K
    Foster-Hartnett, D
    Cooper, A
    Danesh, D
    Larsen, D
    Schmidt, T
    Staggs, R
    Crow, JA
    Retzel, E
    Young, ND
    Shoemaker, RC
    [J]. GENOME, 2001, 44 (04) : 572 - 581
  • [7] Comparison of human genetic and sequence-based physical maps
    Adong Yu
    Chengfeng Zhao
    Ying Fan
    Wonhee Jang
    Andrew J. Mungall
    Panos Deloukas
    Anne Olsen
    Norman A. Doggett
    Nader Ghebranious
    Karl W. Broman
    James L. Weber
    [J]. Nature, 2001, 409 : 951 - 953
  • [8] Comparison of human genetic and sequence-based physical maps
    Yu, A
    Zhao, CF
    Fan, Y
    Jang, WH
    Mungall, AJ
    Deloukas, P
    Olsen, A
    Doggett, NA
    Ghebranious, N
    Broman, KW
    Weber, JL
    [J]. NATURE, 2001, 409 (6822) : 951 - 953
  • [9] BAC-End Sequence-Based SNP Mining in Allotetraploid Cotton (Gossypium) Utilizing Resequencing Data, Phylogenetic Inferences, and Perspectives for Genetic Mapping
    Hulse-Kemp, Amanda M.
    Ashrafi, Hamid
    Stoffel, Kevin
    Zheng, Xiuting
    Saski, Christopher A.
    Scheffler, Brian E.
    Fang, David D.
    Chen, Z. Jeffrey
    Van Deynze, Allen
    Stelly, David M.
    [J]. G3-GENES GENOMES GENETICS, 2015, 5 (06): : 1095 - 1105
  • [10] The map problem: A comparison of genetic and sequence-based physical maps
    DeWan, AT
    Parrado, AR
    Matise, TC
    Leal, SM
    [J]. AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2002, 70 (01) : 101 - 107