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Development of “universal” gene-specific markers from Malus spp. cDNA sequences, their mapping and use in synteny studies within Rosaceae
Ist Teil von
Tree genetics & genomes, 2009, Vol.5 (1), p.133-145
Ort / Verlag
Berlin/Heidelberg: Springer-Verlag
Erscheinungsjahr
2009
Quelle
Alma/SFX Local Collection
Beschreibungen/Notizen
The Rosaceae contains many economically valuable crop genera, including
Malus
(apple),
Fragaria
(strawberry), and
Prunus
(stone fruit). There has been increasing interest in the development of linkage maps for these species, with a view to marker-assisted selection to assist breeding programs and, recently, in the development of transferable markers to permit syntenic comparisons of maps of different rosaceous genera. In this investigation, a set of
Malus
cDNA sequences were downloaded from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory database. The sequences were aligned with homologous full-length
Arabidopsis
genomic DNA sequences to identify putative intron–exon junctions and conserved flanking exon sequences. Primer pairs were designed from the conserved exon sequences flanking predicted intron–exon junctions in the
Malus
cDNA sequences. These were used to amplify products by polymerase chain reaction from the parents of the
Malus
mapping progeny “Fiesta” × “Totem.” Eleven loci, representing ten genes (39%), were polymorphic in the “Fiesta” × “Totem” population and mapped to seven
Malus
linkage groups. Transferability to other rosaceous genera was high, with primer pairs representing 85% of genes, amplifying products from
Fragaria
and primer pairs representing 85% of genes, amplifying products from
Prunus
genomic DNA. These primers were screened in the
Fragaria
and
Prunus
mapping bin sets and 38% of the genes were successfully located on both maps. Analysis of the markers mapped in more than one rosaceous genus revealed patterns of synteny between genera, while a comparison with the physical positions of homologous genes on the
Arabidopsis
genome revealed high sequence conservation but only fragmentary patterns of macrosynteny.