A Review of the Prevalence, Utility, and Caveats of Using Chloroplast Simple Sequence Repeats for Studies of Plant Biology

  • Gregory L. Wheeler
  • , Hanna E. Dorman
  • , Alenda Buchanan
  • , Lavanya Challagundla
  • , Lisa E. Wallace

Research output: Contribution to a Journal (Peer & Non Peer)Review articlepeer-review

94 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Microsatellites occur in all plant genomes and provide useful markers for studies of genetic diversity and structure. Chloroplast microsatellites (cpSSRs) are frequently targeted because they are more easily isolated than nuclear microsatellites. Here, we quantified the frequency and uses of cpSSRs based on a literature review of over 400 studies published 1995-2013. These markers are an important and economical tool for plant biologists and continue to be used alongside modern genomics approaches to study genetic diversity and structure, evolutionary history, and hybridization in native and agricultural species. Studies using speciesspecific primers reported a greater number of polymorphic loci than those employing universal primers. A major disadvantage to cpSSRs is fragment size homoplasy; therefore, we documented its occurrence at several cpSSR loci within and between species of Acmispon (Fabaceae). Based on our empirical data set, we recommend targeted sequencing of a subset of samples combined with fragment genotyping as a cost-efficient, data-rich approach to the use of cpSSRs and as a test of homoplasy. The availability of genomic resources for plants aids in the development of primers for new study systems, thereby enhancing the utility of cpSSRs across plant biology.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1400059
JournalApplications in Plant Sciences
Volume2
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2014
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Chloroplast microsatellite
  • CpSSR
  • Plastid microsatellite
  • Population genetics
  • Size homoplasy

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