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DOI: 10.1055/s-0030-1264332
The first report of microsatellite primer pairs for genetic studies in jojoba [Simmondsia chinensis (Link) Schneider
Jojoba [Simmondsia chinensis (Link) Schneider] is an important industrial plant, native to Arizona, southern California and northern Mexico. The product of primary interest in jojoba is the seed oil, which consists of esters formed from acids and alcohols with chain lengths of 20 or 22 carbon atoms. As many as 300 products containing jojoba have appeared in markets in recent years and the use of jojoba products is expected to increase in future [1]. The use of DNA markers in jojoba breeding is limited and the best method for jojoba improvement has been the selection of plants with desirable characteristics. DNA markers have been extensively used in plant improvement studies [2,3,4]. In the present study a total of 10 microsatellite markers were identified using a strategy described in [5] and this is the first report on jojoba microsatellite markers. In order to evaluate microsatellite primer pairs (Table 1), genomic DNAs of several jojoba samples were extracted using a DNA extraction protocol described in [6]. Results indicated that these primer pairs are very useful in genetic studies of jojoba.
Locus |
Forward Primer (5→ 3′) |
Reverse Primer (5′→ 3′) |
Motif |
Size (bp) |
JMA01 |
ACACCAGATTCCAGAGGCATA |
ATTCGTCAAAGGGGATGATG |
[CT]8 |
198 |
JMA02 |
AGAGTACGCGGGAAGCAGT |
TGCTGGCAAGGGAGGTAATA |
[AG]8 |
600 |
JMA03 |
AGTCGTTTCCCCTGCTTTTC |
CTTCTGCTTATCCCCCTCATC |
[CT]7 |
320 |
JMA04 |
GGACCTCTGCCCTTCTTCTT |
TGGCGTCTTCACTGCTACTC |
[GT]11 |
500 |
JMA05 |
CGGGGATTTATAGTCTTCACTCTC |
GTCCAGGCTTCAGACCAGAG |
[TC]13 |
214 |
JMA06 |
GCATCTGCCATTTTATGTTCAG |
AACCCAGTTCCAGCTTCATC |
[AAT]5 |
180 |
JMA07 |
GCCAAGTGGGGATGTAGAGA |
GGGGACTGAACTCCACCAA |
[GA]8 |
165 |
JMA08 |
GGAACCACAATGGCAACG |
CGCAGGAAGGTCGTAAACTG |
[TCT]9 |
185 |
JMA09 |
GCGGGGAAAGTGTTACGC |
GATTAGCAGAGAAACCAAGGGACT |
[AG]15 |
190 |
JMA10 |
AGTCAGAGTCACAGAGCAATGAA |
AAGAGATTAGCAGAGAAACCAAGG |
[TCT]5 |
700 |
References: 1. Ince, A.G. et al. (2009) Genet. Resour. Crop. Ev. doi: 10.1007/s10722–009–9516–1.
2. Karaca, M., Ince, A.G. (2008)J. Genet. 87:83–86.
3. Ince, A.G. et al. (2009) Genet. Resour. Crop. Ev. 56:211–221.
4. Ince, A.G., Karaca, M. (2009)J. Sci. Food Agric. 89:168–176.
5. Ince, A.G. et al. (2008) Plant Cell Tissue Organ Cult. 94:281–290.
6. Karaca, M. et al. (2005) Anal. Biochem. 343:353–355.