4.1 Article

HIGH INCIDENCE OF CRYPTIC REPEATED ELEMENTS IN MICROSATELLITE FLANKING REGIONS OF GALATHEID GENOMES AND ITS PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS FOR MOLECULAR MARKER DEVELOPMENT

Journal

JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 4, Pages 664-672

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1651/09-3252.1

Keywords

Galatheidae; microsatellites; mobile elements; squat lobsters

Funding

  1. Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD), Northern Ireland
  2. Beaufort Marine Research Award in Fish Population Genetics
  3. Marine Research Sub-Programme of the National Development Plan

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During the development of PCR primer sets for microsatellite marker loci from enriched genomic libraries for three squat lobster species from Galatheidae (Decapoda: Anomura); Munida rugosa (Fabricius, 1775), M. sarsi (Huus, 1935), and Galathea strigosa (Linnaeus, 1761) (collectively known as squat lobsters), a number of unforeseen problems were encountered. These included PCR amplification failure, lack of amplification consistency, and the amplification of multiple fragments. Careful examination of microsatellite containing sequences revealed the existence of cryptic repeated elements on presumed unique flanking regions. BLAST analysis of these and other VNTR containing sequences (N = 252) indicates that these cryptic elements can be grouped into families based upon sequence similarities. The unique features characterising these families suggest that different molecular mechanisms are involved. Of particular relevance is the association of microsatellites with mobile elements. This is the first reported observation of this phenomenon in crustaceans, and it also helps to explain why microsatellite primer development in galatheids has been relatively unsuccessful to date. We suggest a number of steps that can be used to identify similar problems in microsatellite marker development for other species, and also alternative approaches for both marker development and for the study of molecular evolution of species characterised by complex genome organisation. More specifically, we argue that new generation sequencing methodologies, which capitalise on parallel and multiplexed sequencing may pave the way forward for future crustacean research.

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