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Experimental verification of microsatellite null alleles in Norway spruce (Picea abies [L.] Karst.): Implications for population genetic studies
Authors:Sylvia Nascimento de Sousa  Reiner Finkeldey  Oliver Gailing
Affiliation:1. Institute of Forest Genetics and Forest Tree Breeding, Georg-August University, G?ttingen, Büsgenweg 2, 37077, G?ttingen, Germany
Abstract:Three stands ofPicea abies [L.] Karst. with different density in the Harz Mountains (Lower Saxony, Germany) were characterized at 4 microsatellite loci. An excess of homozygotes was observed in all 3 stands at 1 simple sequence repeat (SSR) locus, suggesting the presence of null alleles. To test for the segregation of a null allele, 24 openpollinated seeds (haploid megagametophytes and embryos) from apparently homozygous mother trees were analyzed. For 1 of 3 trees that could be identified as heterozygous for a null allele, no significant deviation from the expected 1∶1 segregation into marker absence (null allele) and marker presence of the second maternal allele could be observed in the haploid megagametophyte. Concordantly, the numbers of embryos heterozygous for the null allele and for the other maternal allele were not significantly different from each other. Inheritance analyses in seedlings and corresponding megagametophytes of gymnosperms were used as a direct experimental verification of microsatellite null alleles in single-tree progeny. Microsatellites with an abundance of null alleles should be discarded from further analysis because inclusion of these loci results in incorrect estimation of allele frequencies.
Keywords:inheritance analysis  megagametophyte  microsatellites  null alleles   Picea abies K
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