Korean freshwater snails of the genus Semisulcospira are widely distributed across East Asia.It has been a very popular nutritional food in Korea,and is an ecologically important water quality indicator because it liv...Korean freshwater snails of the genus Semisulcospira are widely distributed across East Asia.It has been a very popular nutritional food in Korea,and is an ecologically important water quality indicator because it lives only in clean water.However,no microsatellite markers have been generated to study the population genetic diversity of this genus.In the present study,we developed and characterized 18 novel microsatellite loci from Semisulcospira coreana genomic DNA.The microsatellites were isolated using 454 GS-FLX titanium sequencing and 18 markers were used for genotyping in S.coreana.In addition,we also tested the cross-species transferability of the microsatellite markers in four additional Semisulcospira spp.We identified 18 polymorphic loci and the number of alleles per loci,and their polymorphism information content values ranged from 2 to 17 and 0.203 to 0.902,respectively.The observed and expected heterozygosities of the loci ranged from 0.063 to 0.924 and 0.226 to 0.924,respectively.According to the analysis of the cross-species transferability of these markers,four species,S.forticosta,S.gottschei,S.tegulata,and S.libertina,showed a very high transferability(80%–85%).These results show that this set of nuclear markers could be useful for population genetics studies of this species and closely related species.展开更多
Color variation is a well-known feature of sea cucumbers (Apostichopus japonicus), which are classified into three groups based on their colors of red, green and black. It is also one of the most important traits re...Color variation is a well-known feature of sea cucumbers (Apostichopus japonicus), which are classified into three groups based on their colors of red, green and black. It is also one of the most important traits related to how they taste, and it thereby affects their market price. Attempts were made to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and to analyze differences associated with SNP genotypes between green and red color variants using HSP70 as the target gene. The HSP70 gene, which is found universally in organisms from bacteria to humans, is one of the most evolutionarily conserved genes and the most widely studied biomarker of stress response. DNA fragments of 1074 bp covering a partial sequence of the sea cucumber HSP70 gene, were amplified from both red and green variants, and subsequently analyzed for the presence of SNPs. Twenty-seven polymorphic sites in total, including heterozygous sites, were observed. Of these, six sites were found to be significantly different SNP genotypes between green and red variants. Furthermore, PCR with an internal primer designed to include an allelespecific SNP at the 3' end (site 443) showed differentiation between the two variants, 100% and 4.2% amplification in green and red variants, respectively. The validated SNPs may serve as informative genetic markers that can be used to distinguish variants at the early developmental stage, prior to color differentiation.展开更多
基金Supported by the National Institute of Fisheries Science of Republic of Korea(Nos.R2019030,R2019033)
文摘Korean freshwater snails of the genus Semisulcospira are widely distributed across East Asia.It has been a very popular nutritional food in Korea,and is an ecologically important water quality indicator because it lives only in clean water.However,no microsatellite markers have been generated to study the population genetic diversity of this genus.In the present study,we developed and characterized 18 novel microsatellite loci from Semisulcospira coreana genomic DNA.The microsatellites were isolated using 454 GS-FLX titanium sequencing and 18 markers were used for genotyping in S.coreana.In addition,we also tested the cross-species transferability of the microsatellite markers in four additional Semisulcospira spp.We identified 18 polymorphic loci and the number of alleles per loci,and their polymorphism information content values ranged from 2 to 17 and 0.203 to 0.902,respectively.The observed and expected heterozygosities of the loci ranged from 0.063 to 0.924 and 0.226 to 0.924,respectively.According to the analysis of the cross-species transferability of these markers,four species,S.forticosta,S.gottschei,S.tegulata,and S.libertina,showed a very high transferability(80%–85%).These results show that this set of nuclear markers could be useful for population genetics studies of this species and closely related species.
基金supported by the grant from the National Fisheries Research and Development Institute in Korea(RP2011 -BT-013)
文摘Color variation is a well-known feature of sea cucumbers (Apostichopus japonicus), which are classified into three groups based on their colors of red, green and black. It is also one of the most important traits related to how they taste, and it thereby affects their market price. Attempts were made to identify single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and to analyze differences associated with SNP genotypes between green and red color variants using HSP70 as the target gene. The HSP70 gene, which is found universally in organisms from bacteria to humans, is one of the most evolutionarily conserved genes and the most widely studied biomarker of stress response. DNA fragments of 1074 bp covering a partial sequence of the sea cucumber HSP70 gene, were amplified from both red and green variants, and subsequently analyzed for the presence of SNPs. Twenty-seven polymorphic sites in total, including heterozygous sites, were observed. Of these, six sites were found to be significantly different SNP genotypes between green and red variants. Furthermore, PCR with an internal primer designed to include an allelespecific SNP at the 3' end (site 443) showed differentiation between the two variants, 100% and 4.2% amplification in green and red variants, respectively. The validated SNPs may serve as informative genetic markers that can be used to distinguish variants at the early developmental stage, prior to color differentiation.