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What are microsatellites

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Found at high frequency in nuclear genomes of most taxa ... be seen w/ high resolution gel electrophoresis, which allows rapid genotyping ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What are microsatellites


1
What are microsatellites?
  • Tandem repeats of 1-6 nucleotides that are 5 to
    40 repeats long
  • Dinucleotide, trinucleotide, tetranucleotide
    repeats most common
  • Found at high frequency in nuclear genomes of
    most taxa

2
Characteristics of microsatellite mutation
  • Many have high mutation rate
  • Rate 0.01 to 0.000001 mutations per locus per
    generation, average 0.0005
  • Mutations occur due to slippage and proofreading
    errors during replications
  • Mutations result in changes in length of repeat
    string
  • Length differences can be seen w/ high
    resolution gel electrophoresis, which allows
    rapid genotyping
  • High mutation rate generates allelic diverstiy
    necessary for genetic studies of processes acting
    on ecological time scales

3
Some questions addressed using microsatellite
variation
  • Number of populations and which an individual
    originated from
  • Data requirements
  • Multilocus, allele frequency
  • gt10 microsatelites, lower migration and smaller
    pop. size fewer loci
  • Recent historical population expansion or
    contraction and size
  • Data requirements
  • Highly polymorphic microsatellite or sequence
    data
  • gt 1 locus will dampen interlocus sampling error

4
Some questions addressed using microsatellite
variation
  • Individuals genetic relationships, movement, and
    which are clones
  • Data requirements
  • Multilocus, genotype identification
  • possible w/ microsatelites, AFLP and RAPD
  • Dispersal dist., source sink relationships,
    extinction and recolonization, LS effect on
    structure and migration, ?s in structure and
    connectivity
  • Data requirements
  • Many marker types
  • gt 1 locus will dampen interlocus sampling error

5
Pattern of allele diversity of cattle in
AfricaDeveloped using 183 microsatellite allele
frequencies
6
Pros of using microsatellites
  • Sample preparation
  • Small sample of DNA necessary (thank PCR)
  • Relatively short length makes DNA degradation
    less problematic
  • Probably not to same extent of SNPs?
  • Only need cheap extraction kit
  • Species specific primers reduce problem of
    cross contamination
  • Contamination a problem in fecal samples and
    corals (symbiotic algae)
  • Does this apply during primer preparation?

7
Pros of using microsatellites
  • Information content
  • Multilocus technique
  • Reduces sampling error
  • Greater statistical power
  • Codominant markers
  • Can identify heterozygote
  • Less expensive per loci
  • Compared to sequencing multiple loci
  • Multiple loci can be genotyped simultaneously
  • High mutation rate
  • Allows questions of finer timescales to be
    addressed (10-100 generations)
  • High loci diversity important when addressing
    certain questions

8
Cons of using microsatellites
  • Complex mutational processes
  • Creates problems when using Fst and Rst
    statistics
  • Metrics employing stepwise mutation model are
    sensitive to violation of SSM
  • Hidden allelic diversity complicates size based
    allele identification
  • Homoplasy, detectable by sequencing for base
    pair substitution, but not if by back-mutation
  • Amplification problems
  • High mutation rate in flanking region lead to
    problems with markers
  • Null alleles
  • Repeat regions rare in invertebrates,
    lepidopterans, and birds

9
Acquiring microsatellite markers
  • Literature
  • Molecular Ecology Notes
  • Searchable databases
  • http//tomato.bio.trinity.edu/
  • GenBank searchable through National center of
    Biotech. Info.
  • Cross-species amplification
  • Possible when flanking regions highly conserved

10
New markers
  • Many labs offer isolation services
  • Should conduct screening to optimize set of loci
  • Violating assumptions could lead to inaccurate
    and biased estimates
  • Assumptions
  • Accurately scored genotypes
  • All alleles amplified
  • Linkage equilibrium
  • Hardy-Weinburg equilibrium
  • Selective neutrality
  • Mendelian inheritance
  • All alleles differ in length

11
Common repeat sequences
12
Traditional vs contemporary methods
13
References
  • Manel, S., M. K. Schwartz, G. Luikart, and P.
    Taberlet. 2003. Landscape genetics combining
    landscape ecology and population genetics. TREE
    18(4) 189-197.
  • Selkoe, K. A., and R. J. Toonen. 2006.
    Microsatellites for ecologists a practical guide
    to using and evaluating microsatellite markers.
    Ecology Letters 9 615-629.
  • Zane, L., L., Bargelloni, and T. Patarnello.
    2002. Strategies for microsatellite isolation a
    review. Molecular Ecology 11 1-16.
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