PMID: 9435947Aug 1, 1997Paper

Microsatellites in the sand lizard (Lacerta agilis): description, variation, inheritance, and applicability

Biochemical Genetics
A GullbergMats Olsson

Abstract

We developed microsatellite markers for the sand lizard (Lacerta agilis) to enable investigations of the genetic variability within and among populations with a heterogeneous spatial distribution in Sweden. The populations, which could not be characterized by variation in allozymes or mitochondrial DNA, had a substantial level of variability in microsatellite loci. However, the variability in Swedish populations was limited compared to a large, outbred Hungarian population. In the sand lizard, the number of (GT/CA)n repeats was approximately three times higher than that for (CT/GA)n. The number of repeats and the frequency of microsatellites were within the range reported for other species. Three of nine microsatellite loci showed alleles that could not be amplified, which is in agreement with recent reports describing microsatellite "null alleles" as a common occurrence. We discuss the caution which this calls for when calculating paternity probabilities and when estimating between-population allelic differentiation. A potential problem with different mutation rates for alleles within the same locus is discussed.

Citations

Jun 19, 2008·Zoological Science·Domenico FulgioneRakesh K Rastogi
Nov 4, 2010·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Mats OlssonTobias Uller
Feb 7, 2016·Journal of Evolutionary Biology·G LjungströmM Olsson
Jul 21, 2000·Genome Génome / Conseil National De Recherches Canada·P D KhasaB P Dancik
May 25, 2004·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Mats OlssonErik Wapstra
Oct 26, 2011·Evolution; International Journal of Organic Evolution·Mats OlssonRichard Shine
Apr 14, 2011·Molecular Ecology·Mats OlssonDonald Blomqvist
Jun 26, 2004·International Journal for Parasitology·Thierry de MeeûsFrançois Renaud

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