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Title

Mapping and analysis of Simple Sequence Repeats in the Arabidopsis thaliana Genome

Authors

 

Tamanna Anwar 1 and Asad U Khan 1,2*

 

Affiliation

1Distribution Information Sub-centre, 2Interdisciplinary Biotechnology Unit Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh 202002, India.

 

E-mail*

huzzi99@hotmail.com; * Corresponding author

 

Phone

 

091-571-2723088

 

Fax

 

091-571-2721776

 

Article Type

 

Hypothesis

 

Date

 

received October 27, 2005; revised November 19, 2005; accepted November 20, 2005; published online November 22, 2005

 

Abstract

 

Simple sequence repeats (SSRs) are becoming standard DNA markers for plant genome analysis and are being used as markers in marker assisted breeding. And hence because of its great significance we have initiated this study to analyze complete genome of Arabidopsis thaliana for the prevalence of mono-, di-, tri-, tetra-, penta- and hexa- mer repeats in the coding and non-coding regions of the chromosome and to map their exact position on the sequence. We have developed a program that can search a repeat of any length, its exact position on the chromosome and also its frequency of occurrence in the genome.

 

Analysis of the results reveal that maximum number of repeats were found in chromosome 1 followed by chromosome 2 and 4 whereas, chromosome 3 and 5 contain relatively less number of these repeats. Among the SSRs, hexamers and dimers were more predominant in the chromosomes. Overall data showed that Chromosome 5 has minimum number of repeats. The abundance or rarity of various simple repeats in different chromosomes is not explained by nucleotide composition of sequence or potential repeated motifs to form alternative DNA structures. This suggests that in addition to nucleotide composition of repeat motifs, characteristic DNA replication / repair / recombination machinery might play an important role in genesis of repeats. The positional information is given at www.geocities.com/amubioinfo/ARD. This positional information can help Arabidopsis researchers to identify new polymorphisms in chromosomal regions of interest based on the SSRs that map in the area.  

Keywords

 

Simple sequence repeats; Arabidopsis thaliana; polymorphism; loci; coding sequences; non-coding sequences

Citation

 

Anwar & Khan, Bioinformation 1(2): 64-68 (2005)

 

Edited by

 

M. MADAN Babu

 

ISSN

 

0973-2063

 

Publisher

 

Biomedical Informatics

 

License

 

This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. This is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License.