Development and characterization of 140 new microsatellites in apple

Publication Overview
TitleDevelopment and characterization of 140 new microsatellites in apple
AuthorsR. Liebhard, L. Gianfranceschi, B. Koller, C.D. Ryder, R. Tarchini, E. Van De Weg, C. Gessler.
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameMolecular Breeding
Volume10
Issue4
Year2002
Page(s)217-241
CitationR. Liebhard, L. Gianfranceschi, B. Koller, C.D. Ryder, R. Tarchini, E. Van De Weg, C. Gessler. Development and characterization of 140 new microsatellites in apple. Molecular Breeding December 2002, 10(4):217-241

Abstract

The availability of suitable genetic markers is essential to efficiently select and breed apple varieties of high quality and with multiple disease resistances. Microsatellites (simple sequence repeats, SSR) are very useful in this respect since they are codominant, highly polymorphic, abundant and reliably reproducible. Over 140 new SSR markers have been developed in apple and tested on a panel of 7 cultivars and 1 breeding selection. Their high level of polymorphism is expressed with an average of 6.1 alleles per locus and an average heterozygosity (H) of 0.74. Of all SSR markers, 115 have been positioned on a genetic linkage map of the cross ‘Fiesta’ × ‘Discovery’. As a result, all 17 linkage groups, corresponding to the 17 chromosomes of apple, were identified. Each chromosome carries at least two SSR markers, allowing the alignment of any apple molecular marker map both with regard to identification as well as to orientation of the linkage groups. To test the degree of conservation of the SSR flanking regions and the transferability of the SSR markers to other Rosaceae species, 15 primer pairs were tested on a series of Maloideae and Amygdaloideae species. The usefulness of the newly developed microsatellites in genetic mapping is demonstrated by means of the genetic linkage map. The possibility of constructing a global apple linkage map and the impact of such a number of microsatellite markers on gene and QTL mapping is discussed.
Features
This publication contains information about 14 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
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CH01F07ACH01F07Agenetic_marker
CH02a04CH02a04genetic_marker
CH02b12CH02b12genetic_marker
CH03d07CH03d07genetic_marker
CH04e03CH04e03genetic_marker
CH04g07CH04g07genetic_marker
CH04h02CH04h02genetic_marker
CH05b06CH05b06genetic_marker
CH05c06CH05c06genetic_marker
CH05d04CH05d04genetic_marker
CH05d08CH05d08genetic_marker
CH05e04CH05e04genetic_marker
CH05h12CH05h12genetic_marker