4.4 Article

No clustering for linkage map based on low-copy and undermethylated microsatellites

Journal

GENOME
Volume 46, Issue 5, Pages 809-816

Publisher

CANADIAN SCIENCE PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1139/G03-062

Keywords

simple sequence repeats; genome duplication; conifers; Pinus taeda L. hypomethylation; low-copy kinetic component

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Clustering has been reported for conifer genetic maps based on hypomethylated or low-copy molecular markers, resulting in uneven marker distribution. To test this, a framework genetic map was constructed from three types of microsatellites: low-copy, undermethylated, and genomic. These Pinus taeda L. microsatellites were mapped using a three-generation pedigree with 118 progeny. The microsatellites were highly informative; of the 32 markers in intercross configuration, 29 were. segregating for three or four alleles in the progeny. The sex-averaged map placed 51 of the 95 markers in 15 linkage groups at LOD > 4.0. No clustering or uneven distribution across the genome was observed. The three types of P taeda microsatellites were randomly dispersed within each linkage group. The 51 microsatellites covered a map distance of 795 cM, an average distance of 21.8 cM between markers, roughly half of the estimated total map length. The minimum and maximum distances between any two bins was 4.4 and 45.3 cM, respectively. These, microsatellites provided anchor points for framework mapping for polymorphism in R taeda and other closely related hard pines.

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