Microsatellite evolution: testing the ascertainment bias hypothesis

Previous studies suggest the median allele length of microsatellites is longest in the species from which the markers were derived, suggesting that an ascertainment bias was operating. We have examined whether the size distribution of microsatellite alleles between sheep and cattle is source depende...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of molecular evolution 1998-02, Vol.46 (2), p.256-260
Hauptverfasser: Crawford, A.M. (University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.), Kappes, S.M, Paterson, K.A, deGotari, M.J, Dodds, K.G, Freking, B.A, Stone, R.T, Beattie, C.W
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Previous studies suggest the median allele length of microsatellites is longest in the species from which the markers were derived, suggesting that an ascertainment bias was operating. We have examined whether the size distribution of microsatellite alleles between sheep and cattle is source dependent using a set of 472 microsatellites that can be amplified in both species. For those markers that were polymorphic in both species we report a significantly greater number of markers (P 0.001) with longer median allele sizes in sheep, regardless of microsatellite origin. This finding suggests that any ascertainment bias operating during microsatellite selection is only a minor contributor to the variation observed
ISSN:0022-2844
1432-1432
DOI:10.1007/PL00006301