Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids

Mastergradsoppgave i næringsrettet bioteknologi, Avdeling for lærerutdanning og naturvitenskap, Høgskolen i Hedmark, 2016. Master of applied and commercial biotechnology. Most of the aquaculture industry relies on the female production stock because male rapidly leads to sexual development which cau...

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Main Author: Yadav, Deependra
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2826854
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spelling fthsinnlandet:oai:brage.inn.no:11250/2826854 2024-03-03T08:48:33+00:00 Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids Yadav, Deependra 2016 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2826854 eng eng https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2826854 91 BIOTEK Master thesis 2016 fthsinnlandet 2024-02-02T12:42:14Z Mastergradsoppgave i næringsrettet bioteknologi, Avdeling for lærerutdanning og naturvitenskap, Høgskolen i Hedmark, 2016. Master of applied and commercial biotechnology. Most of the aquaculture industry relies on the female production stock because male rapidly leads to sexual development which causes poorer flesh quality and has increased chances to disease susceptibility. The sdY gene was recently discovered as a master sex-determining gene in Rainbow trout and the gene is considered to be conserved in most of the salmonid species. Four species of Salmonid (Salmo trutta, Salmo salar, Salvelinus alpinus and Salmo marmoratus) was selected for this study. Partial mRNA sequences of the sdY gene are available of Salmo trutta, Salmo salar and Salvelinus alpinus at NCBI. These partial mRNA sequences were used to design primers with the aim to amplify and determine the full-length sdY mRNA (cDNA) of Salmo trutta, Salmo salar and Salvelinus alpinus. hiTAIL PCR and 3' RACE was performed to obtain 5' and 3' end of the sdY gene and based on this new sequence information, primers were designed for PCR-based and HRM analysis genotyping methods to differentiate male and female samples. Duplex and triplex PCR-based genotyping were developed. Both the duplex and triplex PCR-based genotyping methods do not able to differentiate the sex of the selected species. HRM analysis using the same sets of primers as in duplex and triplex PCR-based genotyping can readily able to differentiate the sex of the selected species. The developed methods of genotyping cannot be concluded as the best method until we will not test these methods with more sex identified samples of these species. Master Thesis Salmo salar Salvelinus alpinus Høgskolen i Innlandet: Brage INN
institution Open Polar
collection Høgskolen i Innlandet: Brage INN
op_collection_id fthsinnlandet
language English
topic BIOTEK
spellingShingle BIOTEK
Yadav, Deependra
Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids
topic_facet BIOTEK
description Mastergradsoppgave i næringsrettet bioteknologi, Avdeling for lærerutdanning og naturvitenskap, Høgskolen i Hedmark, 2016. Master of applied and commercial biotechnology. Most of the aquaculture industry relies on the female production stock because male rapidly leads to sexual development which causes poorer flesh quality and has increased chances to disease susceptibility. The sdY gene was recently discovered as a master sex-determining gene in Rainbow trout and the gene is considered to be conserved in most of the salmonid species. Four species of Salmonid (Salmo trutta, Salmo salar, Salvelinus alpinus and Salmo marmoratus) was selected for this study. Partial mRNA sequences of the sdY gene are available of Salmo trutta, Salmo salar and Salvelinus alpinus at NCBI. These partial mRNA sequences were used to design primers with the aim to amplify and determine the full-length sdY mRNA (cDNA) of Salmo trutta, Salmo salar and Salvelinus alpinus. hiTAIL PCR and 3' RACE was performed to obtain 5' and 3' end of the sdY gene and based on this new sequence information, primers were designed for PCR-based and HRM analysis genotyping methods to differentiate male and female samples. Duplex and triplex PCR-based genotyping were developed. Both the duplex and triplex PCR-based genotyping methods do not able to differentiate the sex of the selected species. HRM analysis using the same sets of primers as in duplex and triplex PCR-based genotyping can readily able to differentiate the sex of the selected species. The developed methods of genotyping cannot be concluded as the best method until we will not test these methods with more sex identified samples of these species.
format Master Thesis
author Yadav, Deependra
author_facet Yadav, Deependra
author_sort Yadav, Deependra
title Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids
title_short Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids
title_full Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids
title_fullStr Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids
title_full_unstemmed Development of gender-specific PCR test for Salmonids
title_sort development of gender-specific pcr test for salmonids
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2826854
genre Salmo salar
Salvelinus alpinus
genre_facet Salmo salar
Salvelinus alpinus
op_source 91
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/11250/2826854
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