Identification, distribution and comparative analysis of microsatellites in the chloroplast genome of Oryza species Tripathy Kabita1, Singh Balwant**, Misra Gauri1, Singh Nagendra K.* National Institute for Plant Biotechnology, Pusa Campus, New Delhi, 110 012 1Amity Institute of Biotechnology, Amity University, Noida, 201 303, Uttar Pradesh *Corresponding author's e-mail: nksingh4@gmail.com
**balwants27@gmail.com
Online published on 14 November, 2019. Abstract Chloroplast genome is important because of its maternally inherited, conserved within species and stable in structure. This allows elucidation of inter-specific comparison, identification and establishment of evolutionary relationship among different species. Different classes of DNA elements were present in chloroplast genome of Oryza species, among them chloroplast microsatellites were supposed to be highly variable. In this study, a total of 102 sequences of chloroplast genome of 23 species of Oryza genus belonging to ten different genome types were downloaded from NCBI nucleotide database. The chloroplast DNA length among different species varied from 134, 401bp to 136, 133bp. Microsatellite analysis revealed that total SSR number varied from 268 in O. coarctata to 281 in O. granulata. Comparative analysis of repeat type revealed that mononucleotide and trinucleotide were least present, while penta and hexa nucleotide motif were the most common type among all the Oryza species. Frequency analysis of the repeat revealed that T repeat among mono, AT among di, AAT among tri, AATA among tetra, AATTC among penta and AAAGAA among hexa nucleotide repeat was found to be common among most of the Oryza species. Total of five set of SSR markers flanking to penta and hexa nucleotide repeat types were developed which uniquely present among species, namely, O. barthi, O. sativa Japonica, O. cocarctata, O. rhizomatis and O. ridley. Phylogeny based on SSR markers indicate separate evolution of different SSR markers among individual species. Top Keywords Chloroplast, SSR, mining, genome, Oryza species. Top |