Fast and efficient isolation of microsatellites from anonymous genomes a case study from the Antarctic benthos
Microsatellites are molecular markers with high resolving power and therefore a valuable tool for studying microevolutionary processes. However, identification of microsatellites and initial setup can be a labour intensive and time consuming task. We are applying microsatellites in a study aiming to...
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Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | unknown |
Published: |
2006
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Online Access: | https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/14502/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.24799 |
Summary: | Microsatellites are molecular markers with high resolving power and therefore a valuable tool for studying microevolutionary processes. However, identification of microsatellites and initial setup can be a labour intensive and time consuming task. We are applying microsatellites in a study aiming to understand the evolution of the Antarctic benthos and the mechanisms leading to the surprising high diversity in the Southern Ocean.We employed a novel cross-genome hybridization technique for the Antarctic giant isopod species complex Ceratoserolis trilobitoides which does without radioactivity and time consuming screening procedures. A main advantage is that no assumptions have to be made concerning the type of repeats to be screened for. Compared to two radioactive screening methods and another PCR-based, non-radioactive isolation technique (PIMA), the enrichment was very effective with 70-95% of the screened colonies containing short sequence repeats. As much as 50 different microsatellite types were detected within the 140 inserts screened. |
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