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Molecular Markers. Morphological Markers. Recessive in nature Mutations - deleterious phenotype Problems with epistasis, pleiotrophy, incomplete penetrence Influenced by environment Transitory phenotype Difficult to combine. Characteristics of Ideal Polymorphic Markers.
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Morphological Markers • Recessive in nature • Mutations - deleterious phenotype • Problems with epistasis, pleiotrophy, incomplete penetrence • Influenced by environment • Transitory phenotype • Difficult to combine
Characteristics of Ideal Polymorphic Markers • Co-dominant expression • Nondestructive assay • Complete penetrance • Early onset of phenotypic expression • High polymorphism • Random distribution throughout the genome • Assay can be automated
Isozymes • The granddaddy of molecular markers • Lewontin and Hubby 1966 – Amino acid substitutions shift mobility of enzyme through gel • Folding and charge • Still used today
Isozymes • Pros: – Moderately easy, well developed protocols – Don’t need genome information – Decades of data to tie into • Cons: – Low variation – Lots of fresh tissue needed – Many hazardous chemicals
Now 3Methods of Detection • Restriction fragment length polymorphism and Southern blotting (RFLP) • Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) • Sequence information
Southern blotting • Isolate DNA • Digest DNA w/ restriction enzyme • Size fractionate DNA • Denature DNA • Blot SS DNA to membrane
Methodology • Prepare a probe • Label • Denature • Hybridize probe with membrane • Rinse • Autoradiography
Disadvantages: • The technique is laborious • Time-consuming • Expensive • May use isotope
Other VNTRs detect many bands, making them more useful for forensics.
Advantages • Easy to detect via PCR • Lots of polymorphism • Co-dominant in nature • Disadvantages • Initial identification, • DNA sequence information necessary
Others • AFLPs • RAPDs
SNPs • Polymorphism most used in human genomics • 2/3 C → T • Coding and non-coding regions • Sequence information required • High through-put analysis
Nonpolymorphic Markers • Can be used for positional cloning, gene isolation • ESTs (expressed sequence tags) • STSs (sequence tagged sites)
Conclusions • Many types of molecular markers available • Type(s) chosen for use will depend on many factors • Dominant or co-dominant, co-dominant preferable
Conclusions, cont. • Now, markers where there is sequence information are preferred to anonymous markers, for sharing, PCR • Polymorphism is necessary for genetic mapping, not for physical mapping
Conclusions, cont. All molecular markers are not equal. None is ideal. Some are better for some purposes than others. However, all are generally preferable to morphological markers for mapping.