Genome-wide development and use of microsatellite markers for large-scale genotyping applications in foxtail millet [Setaria italica (L.)]

Pandey, G. ; Misra, G. ; Kumari, K. ; Gupta, S. ; Parida, S. K. ; Chattopadhyay, D. ; Prasad, M. (2013) Genome-wide development and use of microsatellite markers for large-scale genotyping applications in foxtail millet [Setaria italica (L.)] DNA Research, 20 (2). pp. 197-207. ISSN 1340-2838

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Official URL: http://dnaresearch.oxfordjournals.org/content/20/2...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/dnares/dst002

Abstract

The availability of well-validated informative co-dominant microsatellite markers and saturated genetic linkage map has been limited in foxtail millet (Setaria italica L.). In view of this, we conducted a genome-wide analysis and identified 28 342 microsatellite repeat-motifs spanning 405.3 Mb of foxtail millet genome. The trinucleotide repeats (∼48%) was prevalent when compared with dinucleotide repeats (∼46%). Of the 28 342 microsatellites, 21 294 (∼75%) primer pairs were successfully designed, and a total of 15 573 markers were physically mapped on 9 chromosomes of foxtail millet. About 159 markers were validated successfully in 8 accessions of Setaria sp. with ∼67% polymorphic potential. The high percentage (89.3%) of cross-genera transferability across millet and non-millet species with higher transferability percentage in bioenergy grasses (∼79%, Switchgrass and ∼93%, Pearl millet) signifies their importance in studying the bioenergy grasses. In silico comparative mapping of 15 573 foxtail millet microsatellite markers against the mapping data of sorghum (16.9%), maize (14.5%) and rice (6.4%) indicated syntenic relationships among the chromosomes of foxtail millet and target species. The results, thus, demonstrate the immense applicability of developed microsatellite markers in germplasm characterization, phylogenetics, construction of genetic linkage map for gene/quantitative trait loci discovery, comparative mapping in foxtail millet, including other millets and bioenergy grass species.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Kazusa DNA Research Institute.
Keywords:Foxtail Millet (Setaria italica L.); Microsatellite; Comparative Mapping; Physical Mapping; Transferability
ID Code:98582
Deposited On:17 Oct 2014 11:39
Last Modified:19 May 2016 10:33

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