Genome-based development of 15 microsatellite markers in fluorescent multiplexes for parentage testing in captive tigers

As one of the most endangered species, tiger ( ) inbreeding has become an urgent issue to address. Using a microsatellite (short tandem repeat, STR) identification system, paternity testing may be helpful to avoid inbreeding in captive breeding programs. In this study, we developed a genome-based id...

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Veröffentlicht in:PeerJ (San Francisco, CA) CA), 2020-05, Vol.8, p.e8939-e8939, Article e8939
Hauptverfasser: Zhao, Xiao, Qiu, Qiguan, Li, Chang, Fu, Dongke, Hu, Xuesong, Gao, Shengjie, Zhu, Yugang, Mu, Haofang, Wang, Runping, Yang, Huanming, Li, Bo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:As one of the most endangered species, tiger ( ) inbreeding has become an urgent issue to address. Using a microsatellite (short tandem repeat, STR) identification system, paternity testing may be helpful to avoid inbreeding in captive breeding programs. In this study, we developed a genome-based identification system named tiger pedigree identification multiplex system (TPI-plex). By analyzing the entire tiger genome, 139,967 STR loci were identified and 12.76% of these displayed three to six alleles among three re-sequenced individual tiger genomes. A total of 204 candidate STRs were identified and screened with a reference population containing 31 unrelated captive tigers. Of these, 15 loci were chosen for inclusion in the multiplex panel. The mean allele number and mean expected heterozygosity (He) were 7.3333 and 0.7789, respectively. The cumulative probability of exclusion (CPE) and total probability of discrimination power (TDP) reached 0.999999472 and 0.999999999999995, respectively. The results showed that the TPI-plex system can be applied in routine pedigree identification for captive tigers. We also added a sex identification marker named TAMEL into the TPI-plex for sex determination.
ISSN:2167-8359
2167-8359
DOI:10.7717/peerj.8939