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Research Article
ScienceAsia 22 (1996): 267-274 |doi: 10.2306/scienceasia1513-1874.1996.22.267
GENOTYPING FREE-RANGING RODENTS WITH HETEROLOGOUS PCR PRIMER PAIRS FOR HYPERVARIABLE NUCLEAR MICROSATELLITE LOCI
SUKAMOL SRIKWAN, DAWN FIELD AND DAVID S. WOODRUFF
ABSTRACT: The application of commercially available microsatellite primers, developed for genomic analysis of the laboratory rat (Rattus norvegicus) and laboratory mouse (Mus musculus), to the genotyping of wild rodents provides a rapid and inexpensive alternative to cloning sequencing and synthesizing species-specific primers de novo. The effort required to identify a useful panel of heterologous
(interspecifically derived) primers for loci in genetically unknown rodents is illustrated with a study of
three wild rodents in Thailand. Eight out of 13 (62%) of the rat primer pairs tested amplified polymorphic sequences in a representative of a closely related genus, Maxomys surifer, and all 8 of these primer pairs amplified polymorphic sequences in the wild congener, R. rattus. Of the mouse primer pairs 33% (10/30) amplified polymorphic sequences in a distantly related tree mouse, Chiropodomys gliroides.
Preliminary surveys of wild M. surifer and C. gliroides in Thai forests revealed high levels of
polymorphism at these microsatelite loci and up to 20 alleles segregating per locus. These loci are variable enough to be used to establish pedigree relationships and population structure, and monitor gene flow and genetic erosion. Multilocus genotyping based on non invasive DNA sampling and PCR employing both homologous and heterologous microsatellite primers promises to revolutionize genetic analyses of free-ranging rodents.
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Department of Biology and Center of Molecular Genetics, University of California, San Diego, La folia,
CA 92093-0116. USA.
Received May 16, 1996
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