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Multi-individual Microsatellite identification: a multiple genome approach to microsatellite design (MiMi)

Fox, G; Preziosi, RF; Antwis, RE; Benavides‐Serrato, M; Combe, FJ; Edwin Harris, W; Hartley, IR; Kitchener, AC; de Kort, SR; Nekaris, A; Rowntree, JK

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Authors

G Fox

RF Preziosi

RE Antwis

M Benavides‐Serrato

FJ Combe

W Edwin Harris

IR Hartley

AC Kitchener

SR de Kort

A Nekaris

JK Rowntree



Abstract

Bespoke microsatellite marker panels are increasingly affordable and tractable to researchers and conservationists. The rate of microsatellite discovery is very high within a shotgun genomic dataset, but extensive laboratory testing of markers is required for confirmation of amplification and polymorphism. By incorporating shotgun next-generation sequencing datasets from multiple individuals of the same species, we have developed a new method for the optimal design of microsatellite markers. This new tool allows us to increase the rate at which suitable candidate markers are selected by 58% in direct comparisons and facilitate an estimated 16% reduction in costs associated with producing a novel microsatellite panel. Our method enables the visualisation of each microsatellite locus in a multiple sequence alignment allowing several important quality checks to be made. Polymorphic loci can be identified and prioritised. Loci containing fragment-length-altering mutations in the flanking regions, which may invalidate assumptions regarding the model of evolution underlying variation at the microsatellite, can be avoided. Priming regions containing point mutations can be detected and avoided, helping to reduce sample-site-marker specificity arising from genetic isolation, and the likelihood of null alleles occurring. We demonstrate the utility of this new approach in two species: an echinoderm and a bird. Our method makes a valuable contribution towards minimising genotyping errors and reducing costs associated with developing a novel marker panel. The Python script to perform our method of multi-individual microsatellite identification (MiMi) is freely available from GitHub (https://github.com/graemefox/mimi).

Citation

Fox, G., Preziosi, R., Antwis, R., Benavides‐Serrato, M., Combe, F., Edwin Harris, W., …Rowntree, J. (2019). Multi-individual Microsatellite identification: a multiple genome approach to microsatellite design (MiMi). Molecular Ecology Resources, 19(6), 1672-1680. https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13065

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jul 24, 2019
Online Publication Date Jul 24, 2019
Publication Date Jul 24, 2019
Deposit Date Aug 21, 2019
Publicly Available Date Jul 24, 2020
Journal Molecular Ecology Resources
Print ISSN 1755-098X
Publisher Wiley
Volume 19
Issue 6
Pages 1672-1680
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13065
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13065

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