Development and Characterization of Genomic and Expressed SSRs in Citrus by Genome-Wide Analysis

Publication Overview
TitleDevelopment and Characterization of Genomic and Expressed SSRs in Citrus by Genome-Wide Analysis
AuthorsLiu S, Li W, Long D, Hu C, Zhang J
TypeJournal Article
Journal NamePLOS ONE
Volume8
Issue10
Year2013
Page(s)e75149
CitationLiu S, Li W, Long D, Hu C, Zhang J. Development and Characterization of Genomic and Expressed SSRs in Citrus by Genome-Wide Analysis. PLOS ONE. 2013; 8(10):e75149.

Abstract

Microsatellites or simple sequence repeats (SSRs) are one of the most popular sources of genetic markers and play a significant role in plant genetics and breeding. In this study, we identified citrus SSRs in the genome of Clementine mandarin and analyzed their frequency and distribution in different genomic regions. A total of 80,708 SSRs were detected in the genome with an overall density of 268 SSRs/Mb. While di-nucleotide repeats were the most frequent microsatellites in genomic DNA sequence, tetra-nucleotides, which had more repeat units than any other SSR types, had the highest cumulative sequence length. We identified 6,834 transcripts as containing 8,989 SSRs in 33,929 Clementine mandarin transcripts, among which, tri-nucleotide motifs (36.0%) were the most common, followed by di-nucleotide (26.9%) and hexa-nucleotide motifs (15.1%). The motif AG (16.7%) was most abundant among these SSRs, while motifs AAG (6.6%), AAT (5.0%), and TAG (2.2%) were most common among tri-nucleotides. Functional categorization of transcripts containing SSRs revealed that 5,879 (86.0%) of such transcripts had homology with known proteins, GO and KEGG annotation revealed that transcripts containing SSRs were those implicated in diverse biological processes in plants, including binding, development, transcription, and protein degradation. When 27 genomic and 78 randomly selected SSRs were tested on Clementine mandarin, 95 SSRs revealed polymorphism. These 95 SSRs were further deployed on 18 genotypes of the three generas of Rutaceae for the genetic diversity assessment, genomic SSRs generally show low transferability in comparison to SSRs developed from expressed sequences. These transcript-markers identified in our study may provide a valuable genetic and genomic tool for further genetic research and varietal development in citrus, such as diversity study, QTL mapping, molecular breeding, comparative mapping and other genetic analyses.
Features
This publication contains information about 105 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
Ciclev10000296mCiclev10000296mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001225mCiclev10001225mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001229mCiclev10001229mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001304mCiclev10001304mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001581mCiclev10001581mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001597mCiclev10001597mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001636mCiclev10001636mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001783mCiclev10001783mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001956mCiclev10001956mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10001989mCiclev10001989mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10002156mCiclev10002156mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10003120mCiclev10003120mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10004324mCiclev10004324mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10004324m.1Ciclev10004324m.1genetic_marker
Ciclev10004324m.2Ciclev10004324m.2genetic_marker
Ciclev10004324m.3Ciclev10004324m.3genetic_marker
Ciclev10005087mCiclev10005087mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10005200mCiclev10005200mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10005200m.1Ciclev10005200m.1genetic_marker
Ciclev10005200m.2Ciclev10005200m.2genetic_marker
Ciclev10005200m.3Ciclev10005200m.3genetic_marker
Ciclev10005203mCiclev10005203mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10005481mCiclev10005481mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10005497mCiclev10005497mgenetic_marker
Ciclev10005954mCiclev10005954mgenetic_marker

Pages

Stocks
This publication contains information about 1 stocks:
Stock NameUniquenameType
ClementineClementineaccession
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
DOIdoi:10.1371/journal.pone.0075149
URLhttp://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0075149
Year2013