| Literature DB >> 34961186 |
Oleg S Alexandrov1, Gennady I Karlov1.
Abstract
The Elaeagnus L. species are trees and bushes that mainly grow in temperate zones of Western Europe; Minor, Central, and Southeast Asia; the Far East; and North America. Some species are used as fruit or ornamental plants and have economic value. Problems with the identification of species in the Elaeagnus genus by molecular genetical methods arise in the study of populations, systematics, breeding, and other areas of plant science and practice. Recently, the polymorphism of 5S ribosomal DNA non-transcribed spacers (5S rDNA NTSs) in Elaeagnaceae Adans. has been described. The results were used in our study as a basis for development of new species-specific molecular markers for some members of the Elaeagnus genus. The author's method was applied for finding regions that were potentially applicable for species-specific primer design. As a result, some species-specific molecular markers were developed for Elaeagnus angustifolia L., E. commutata Bernh., E. pungens Thunb., and E. multiflora Thunb. These markers were tested in a range of samples and showed the presence of amplified fragments in lanes of the marked species only. Samples of other species showed no amplifications. Thus, the developed markers may be useful for the species identification of the studied Elaeagnus plants in botanical, dendrological, and genetic research (especially in a leafless period of year), as well as in breeding and hybridization experiments.Entities:
Keywords: 5S rDNA non-transcribed spacers; DNA polymorphism; Elaeagnus L. species; molecular markers; species identification
Year: 2021 PMID: 34961186 PMCID: PMC8704621 DOI: 10.3390/plants10122713
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Plants (Basel) ISSN: 2223-7747
Figure 1Detection of PCR products by electrophoresis (A) with Elang1-f/Elang1-r primers, (B) with Elcom1-f/Elcom1-r primers, (C) with Elpung1-f/Elpung1-r primers, and (D) with Elmult1-f/Elmult2-r primers. Numbers of lanes correspond to numbers of samples in Supplementary Materials Table S13. M, marker of molecular weight with 100 bp stepFinally, different combinations of Elmult1-f and Elmult2-f, as well as Elmult1-r, Elmult2-r, and Elmult3-r, were tested by using a PCR experiment (the tests were carried out among a limited number of samples selected according to the principle “one species–one sample” for Elaeagnus spp. and H. rhamnoides as a control). The Elmult1-f/Emult3-r pair did not show the amplified fragments in all samples and was dismissed as a very unfortunate pair (Figure S1). All remaining pairs showed target amplification in the E. multiflora and E. umbellata samples (the NTSs of these species look similar to NTSs of one species). However, the Emult2-f/Emult1-r and Emult2-f/Emult2-r pairs also demonstrated the amplified fragments in E. pungens sample. Thus, the best pairs were Elmult1-f/Elmult1-r, Elmult1-f/Elmult2-r, and Elmult2-f/Elmult3-r, because they did not have a non-specific amplification in any other Elaeagnus species and H. rhamnoides. The amplifications with the Elmult1-f/Elmult2-r pair were the brightest among all E. multiflora primer combinations (Figure S1). It is likely that the PCR conditions for this pair turned out to be the most optimal. This pair should be recommended first. It was used to check all Elaeagnaceae samples collected for this study (Figure 1D).
Designed primers and their parameters.
| Primer Name | Sequence | Annealing, t °C 1 | PCR Product Length, bp |
|---|---|---|---|
| Elang1-f | 5′-TCGATCAACCGAATCAAACA-3′ | 59.0 | 150 |
| Elang1-r | 5′-CGAAACTTGTTATTTTTGCGAAT-3′ | ||
| Elcom1-f | 5′-TCTAATCCGATAAACCGAATTGT-3′ | 62.0 | 151 |
| Elcom1-r | 5′-AAAGTATTTCATGCGTGCGTAA-3′ | ||
| Elcom2-f | 5′-GCTCTATTTTATTCTAATCCGAT-3′ | 62.0 | 165 |
| Elcom2-r | 5′-GATTTGTACGGGTAAAGTATTT-3′ | ||
| Elpung1-f | 5′-GTGTAAGTAGAAAGTTGGAAAC-3′ | 54.0 | 253 |
| Elpung1-r | 5′-AACTCTTCTTATGATTTGGTT-3′ | ||
| Elmult1-f | 5′-GGATGGGTGACCTCCGG-3′ | 55.0 | 328 |
| Elmul1-r | 5′-AACGTTCTACATGCATTCGT-3′ | ||
| Elmult1-f | 5′-GGATGGGTGACCTCCGG-3′ | 55.0 | 328 |
| Elmult2-r | 5′-GGCGACCCTGGGAAGTGT-3′ | ||
| Elmult1-f | 5′-GGATGGGTGACCTCCGG-3′ | 55.0 | 329 |
| Elmult3-r | 5′-TAACGTTCTACATGCATTCG-3′ | ||
| Elmult2-f | 5′-GCTACATCATCAGTCCAACA-3′ | 55.0 | 103 |
| Elmult1-r | 5′-AACGTTCTACATGCATTCGT-3′ | ||
| Elmult2-f | 5′-GCTACATCATCAGTCCAACA-3′ | 55.0 | 103 |
| Elmult2-r | 5′-GGCGACCCTGGGAAGTGT-3′ | ||
| Elmult2-f | 5′-GCTACATCATCAGTCCAACA-3′ | 55.0 | 104 |
| Elmult3-r | 5′-TAACGTTCTACATGCATTCG-3′ |
1 This is an “N” in Section 4.3.