New SSR Markers for Use in Cotton (Gossypium spp.) Improvement.

Publication Overview
TitleNew SSR Markers for Use in Cotton (Gossypium spp.) Improvement.
AuthorsXiao J; Wu K; Fang DD; Stelly DM; Yu JZ; Cantrell RG; Yu J
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameJournal of Cotton Science
Volume13
Year2009
Page(s)75 157
CitationXiao J, Wu K, Fang DD, Stelly DM, Yu J, Cantrell RG. New SSR Markers for Use in Cotton (Gossypium spp.) Improvement. Journal of cotton science. 2009; 13(2):75-157
Publication CodeJCS-13-75

Abstract

SSR markers, also known as microsatellite DNA markers, are very useful for saturation of the large and complex upland cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) genetic linkage map. Monsanto has invested heavily in development of cotton SSRs and has implemented molecular breeding technologies for the genetic improvement of cotton globally and the acceleration of the integration of biotechnology traits into the most elite upland cotton germplasm in the commercial pipeline. Genomic clones from microsatellite-enriched cotton DNA libraries were sequenced to identify SSR-containing target regions and SSR-containing EST collections were searched. PCR primer pairs were generated for 5,475 target sequences and utilized to amplify SSR marker loci which provide useable levels of polymorphism in interspecific and intraspecific genetic populations. Bioinformatics analysis of these sequences and primer pairs relative to SSR sequences already present in current public databases reveal that approximately 2,937 of these SSR primer pairs and target genomic sequences are unique and amplify about 4,000 unique marker loci in a tetraploid cotton genome depending on the germplasm analyzed. A subset of the Monsanto SSR markers were placed on a consensus genetic map along with a selected set of public anchor SSR markers (BNL and JESPR markers). Chromosome-marker bins, each 20 cM in size, were constructed on the genetic linkage map containing the two public marker sources. This generated 207 marker bins for a total of about 4,140cM which is approximately the size of the tetraploid cotton genetic map. These bins contain 945 unique Monsanto SSR marker loci and 615 public anchor SSR markers. In order to contribute to the expanding genomic resources for cotton research and improvement, Monsanto is facilitating the uploading of the unique SSR primer sequences, their respective target clone sequence, and chromosome bin designation (if known) to Cotton DB (http://cottondb.org/) and CMD (http://cottonmarker.org) databases. These will be available for general use in the cotton research community without restriction.
Features
This publication contains information about 5,155 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
GQ394887GQ394887.1region
GQ394883GQ394883.1region
GQ394878GQ394878.1region
GQ394876GQ394876.1region
GQ394875GQ394875.1region
GQ394873GQ394873.1region
GQ394871GQ394871.1region
GQ394869GQ394869.1region
GQ394868GQ394868.1region
GQ394867GQ394867.1region
GQ394862GQ394862.1region
GQ394853GQ394853.1region
GQ394852GQ394852.1region
GQ394851GQ394851.1region
GQ394849GQ394849.1region
GQ394846GQ394846.1region
GQ394845GQ394845.1region
GQ394842GQ394842.1region
GQ394837GQ394837.1region
GQ394833GQ394833.1region
GQ394828GQ394828.1region
GQ394827GQ394827.1region
GQ394824GQ394824.1region
GQ394820GQ394820.1region
GQ394816GQ394816.1region

Pages

Featuremaps
This publication contains information about 1 maps:
Map Name
Monsanto SSR Bin Map, (2009)
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Published LocationUnited States
Publication TypeJournal Article
eISSN1524-3303
pISSN1523-6919
URLhttps://pubag.nal.usda.gov/download/32314/pdf
Language Abbreng
Publication Date2009
Journal AliasThe journal of cotton science
Publication Model[electronic resource].
Journal CodeJCS
Publication CodeJCS-13-75
LanguageEnglish
Keywordsmicrosatellite repeats, genetic markers, DNA libraries, expressed sequence tags, DNA primers, linkage groups, chromosome mapping, genetic polymorphism, genetic improvement, plant genetic resources, chromosome bin maps, chromosome mapping; linkage groups; genetic polymorphism; plant genetic resources; genetic improvement; DNA primers; microsatellite repeats; Gossypium hirsutum; genetic markers; expressed sequence tags; DNA libraries