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Use of cellular oncogene probes to identify Morone hybrids.
Authors:I I Wirgin  L Maceda  C Mesing
Institution:Institute of Environmental Medicine, New York University Medical Center, Tuxedo 10987.
Abstract:We tested the ability of cellular oncogene (c-onc) probes to identify F1 hybrids and the lineage of known backcrosses within the fish genus Morone. Total DNA was isolated from five to 14 individuals per North American Morone species (striped bass, white bass, white perch, and yellow bass). The DNA was digested with two restriction enzymes, Eco RI and Hin dIII, Southern blotted, and hybridized to six different c-onc probes including v-abl, v-erb B, c-myc, c-H-ras, c-K-ras, and v-src. We found fixed genotypic differences among the four species for all six probes in single restriction enzyme digests. The heritability of these nuclear DNA genotypes was evaluated in hatchery-produced F1 Morone hybrids (striped bass x white bass and striped bass x white perch) tested with the six informative single probe/restriction enzyme combinations. All F1 individuals exhibited heterozygosity in all diagnostic nuclear DNA fragments, confirming the Mendelian inheritance of these genotypes in these fish. Furthermore, analysis of these nuclear DNA genotypes in hatchery-produced backcrosses of F1 hybrids striped bass x (white bass x striped bass) detected both recombinant and parental genotypes at all six polymorphic c-onc sequences. The lineage of suspected Morone hybrids of unknown descent collected from Lewis Smith Lake, Alabama, and from the Occoquan River, Virginia, was determined using the c-onc probes. Our results suggest that c-onc probes are suitable markers to unequivocally identify F1 hybrids and backcrosses and to quantify introgression in natural populations of fishes. The addition of RFLP analysis of mtDNA provided a complete ancestral history of individual fish.
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