Functionally relevant microsatellite markers from chickpea transcription factor genes for efficient genotyping applications and trait association mapping

Publication Overview
TitleFunctionally relevant microsatellite markers from chickpea transcription factor genes for efficient genotyping applications and trait association mapping
AuthorsKujur A, Bajaj D, Saxena MS, Tripathi S, Upadhyaya HD, Gowda CL, Singh S, Jain M, Tyagi AK, Parida SK
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameDNA research : an international journal for rapid publication of reports on genes and genomes
Volume20
Issue4
Year2013
Page(s)355-74
CitationKujur A, Bajaj D, Saxena MS, Tripathi S, Upadhyaya HD, Gowda CL, Singh S, Jain M, Tyagi AK, Parida SK. Functionally relevant microsatellite markers from chickpea transcription factor genes for efficient genotyping applications and trait association mapping. DNA research : an international journal for rapid publication of reports on genes and genomes. 2013 Aug; 20(4):355-74.

Abstract

We developed 1108 transcription factor gene-derived microsatellite (TFGMS) and 161 transcription factor functional domain-associated microsatellite (TFFDMS) markers from 707 TFs of chickpea. The robust amplification efficiency (96.5%) and high intra-specific polymorphic potential (34%) detected by markers suggest their immense utilities in efficient large-scale genotyping applications, including construction of both physical and functional transcript maps and understanding population structure. Candidate gene-based association analysis revealed strong genetic association of TFFDMS markers with three major seed and pod traits. Further, TFGMS markers in the 5' untranslated regions of TF genes showing differential expression during seed development had higher trait association potential. The significance of TFFDMS markers was demonstrated by correlating their allelic variation with amino acid sequence expansion/contraction in the functional domain and alteration of secondary protein structure encoded by genes. The seed weight-associated markers were validated through traditional bi-parental genetic mapping. The determination of gene-specific linkage disequilibrium (LD) patterns in desi and kabuli based on single nucleotide polymorphism-microsatellite marker haplotypes revealed extended LD decay, enhanced LD resolution and trait association potential of genes. The evolutionary history of a strong seed-size/weight-associated TF based on natural variation and haplotype sharing among desi, kabuli and wild unravelled useful information having implication for seed-size trait evolution during chickpea domestication.

Features
This publication contains information about 1,269 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
TFGMS149TFGMS149genetic_marker
TFGMS15TFGMS15genetic_marker
TFGMS150TFGMS150genetic_marker
TFGMS151TFGMS151genetic_marker
TFGMS152TFGMS152genetic_marker
TFGMS153TFGMS153genetic_marker
TFGMS154TFGMS154genetic_marker
TFGMS155TFGMS155genetic_marker
TFGMS156TFGMS156genetic_marker
TFGMS157TFGMS157genetic_marker
TFGMS158TFGMS158genetic_marker
TFGMS159TFGMS159genetic_marker
TFGMS16TFGMS16genetic_marker
TFGMS160TFGMS160genetic_marker
TFGMS161TFGMS161genetic_marker
TFGMS162TFGMS162genetic_marker
TFGMS163TFGMS163genetic_marker
TFGMS164TFGMS164genetic_marker
TFGMS165TFGMS165genetic_marker
TFGMS166TFGMS166genetic_marker
TFGMS167TFGMS167genetic_marker
TFGMS168TFGMS168genetic_marker
TFGMS169TFGMS169genetic_marker
TFGMS17TFGMS17genetic_marker
TFGMS170TFGMS170genetic_marker

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryEngland
Publication ModelPrint-Electronic
ISSN1756-1663
eISSN1756-1663
Publication Date2013 Aug
Journal AbbreviationDNA Res.
DOI10.1093/dnares/dst015
Elocation10.1093/dnares/dst015
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't