Development of chickpea EST-SSR markers and analysis of allelic variation across related species

Publication Overview
TitleDevelopment of chickpea EST-SSR markers and analysis of allelic variation across related species
AuthorsChoudhary S, Sethy NK, Shokeen B, Bhatia S
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameTAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik
Volume118
Issue3
Year2009
Page(s)591-608
CitationChoudhary S, Sethy NK, Shokeen B, Bhatia S. Development of chickpea EST-SSR markers and analysis of allelic variation across related species. TAG. Theoretical and applied genetics. Theoretische und angewandte Genetik. 2009 Feb; 118(3):591-608.

Abstract

Despite chickpea being the third important grain legume, there is a limited availability of genomic resources, especially of the expressed sequence tag (EST)-based markers. In this study, we generated 822 chickpea ESTs from immature seeds as well as exploited 1,309 ESTs from the chickpea database, thus utilizing a total of 2,131 EST sequences for development of functional EST-SSR markers. Two hundred and forty-six simple sequence repeat (SSR) motifs were identified from which 183 primer pairs were designed and 60 validated as functional markers. Genetic diversity analysis across 30 chickpea accessions revealed ten markers to be polymorphic producing a total of 29 alleles and an observed heterozygosity average of 0.16 thereby exhibiting low levels of intra-specific polymorphism. However, the markers exhibited high cross-species transferability ranging from 68.3 to 96.6% across the six annual Cicer species and from 29.4 to 61.7% across the seven legume genera. Sequence analysis of size variant amplicons from various species revealed that size polymorphism was due to multiple events such as copy number variation, point mutations and insertions/deletions in the microsatellite repeat as well as in the flanking regions. Interestingly, a wide prevalence of crossability-group-specific sequence variations were observed among Cicer species that were phylogenetically informative. The neighbor joining dendrogram clearly separated the chickpea cultivars from the wild Cicer and validated the proximity of C. judaicum with C. pinnatifidum. Hence, this study for the first time provides an insight into the distribution of SSRs in the chickpea transcribed regions and also demonstrates the development and utilization of genic-SSRs. In addition to proving their suitability for genetic diversity analysis, their high rates of transferability also proved their potential for comparative genomic studies and for following gene introgressions and evolution in wild species, which constitute the valuable secondary genepool in chickpea.

Features
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CESSRDB53CESSRDB53genetic_marker
CESSRDB54CESSRDB54genetic_marker
CESSRDB55CESSRDB55genetic_marker
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Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication ModelPrint-Electronic
ISSN0040-5752
pISSN0040-5752
Publication Date2009 Feb
Journal AbbreviationTheor. Appl. Genet.
DOI10.1007/s00122-008-0923-z
Elocation10.1007/s00122-008-0923-z
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryGermany
Publication TypeResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't