Innovatív tudományos műhelyek a hazai agrár felsőoktatásban(EFOP-3-6-3-VEKOP-16-2017-00008)
Támogató: EFOP-VEKOP
Szakterületek:
Genetika és örökléstan
Microsatellites are widely applied in population and forensic genetics, wildlife studies
and parentage testing in animal breeding, among others, and recently, high-throughput
sequencing technologies have greatly facilitated the identification of microsatellite
markers. In this study the genomic data of Cervus elaphus (CerEla1.0) was exploited,
in order to identify microsatellite loci along the red deer genome and for designing
the cognate primers. The bioinformatics pipeline identified 982,433 microsatellite
motifs genome-wide, assorted along the chromosomes, from which 45,711 loci mapped
to the X- and 1096 to the Y-chromosome. Primers were successfully designed for 170,873
loci, and validated with an independently developed autosomal tetranucleotide STR
set. Ten X- and five Y-chromosome-linked microsatellites were selected and tested
by two multiplex PCR setups on genomic DNA samples of 123 red deer stags. The average
number of alleles per locus was 3.3, and the average gene diversity value of the markers
was 0.270. The overall observed and expected heterozygosities were 0.755 and 0.832,
respectively. Polymorphic Information Content (PIC) ranged between 0.469 and 0.909
per locus with a mean value of 0.813. Using the X- and Y-chromosome linked markers
19 different Y-chromosome and 72 X-chromosome lines were identified. Both the X- and
the Y-haplotypes split to two distinct clades each. The Y-chromosome clades correlated
strongly with the geographic origin of the haplotypes of the samples. Segregation
and admixture of subpopulations were demonstrated by the use of the combination of
nine autosomal and 16 sex chromosomal STRs concerning southwestern and northeastern
Hungary. In conclusion, the approach demonstrated here is a very efficient method
for developing microsatellite markers for species with available genomic sequence
data, as well as for their use in individual identifications and in population genetics
studies.