Survey of simple sequence repeats in completed fungal genomes.

@article{Karaolu2005SurveyOS,
  title={Survey of simple sequence repeats in completed fungal genomes.},
  author={Haydar Karaoğlu and CRYSTAL MAN YING Lee and Wieland Meyer},
  journal={Molecular biology and evolution},
  year={2005},
  volume={22 3},
  pages={
          639-49
        }
}
The use of simple sequence repeats or microsatellites as genetic markers has become very popular because of their abundance and length variation between different individuals. SSRs are tandem repeat units of 1 to 6 base pairs that are found abundantly in many prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes. This is the first study examining and comparing SSRs in completely sequenced fungal genomes. We analyzed and compared the occurrences, relative abundance, relative density, most common, and longest SSRs… 

Figures and Tables from this paper

Survey and analysis of simple sequence repeats in the Laccaria bicolor genome, with development of microsatellite markers
TLDR
Unlike previously developed microsatellite markers, these new ones are spread throughout the genome; these markers could have immediate applications in population genetics.
Genome-Wide Survey and Analysis of Microsatellite Sequences in Bovid Species
TLDR
The number of SSRs, relative abundance, relative density, and relative density of SSR decreased as the motif repeat length increased in each species of Bovidae, and the most GC-content was in trinucleotide SSRs and the least was in the mononucleotideSSRs in the six bovid genomes.
Genome wide survey and analysis of small repetitive sequences in caulimoviruses.
In silico genome-wide identification and analysis of microsatellite repeats in the largest RNA virus family (Closteroviridae)
TLDR
This is the first analysis of microsatellites occurring in the largest viral genome that infects plants, and it is indicated that simple repeats were less abundant in genomes of Closteroviridae.
Genome wide survey and analysis of microsatellites in Tombusviridae family
TLDR
Analyzing the nature and distribution of both simple and complex microsatellites present in complete genome of 47 species of Tombusviridae family showed that simple repeats were lower than many RNA virus genomes.
Coevolution between simple sequence repeats (SSRs) and virus genome size
TLDR
It is concluded that genome size is an important factor in affecting the occurrence ofSSRs; hosts are also responsible for the variances of SSRs content to a certain degree.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 73 REFERENCES
Simple sequence repeats in Escherichia coli: abundance, distribution, composition, and polymorphism.
TLDR
SSR polymorphism could prove important as a genome-wide source of variation, both for practical applications (including rapid detection, strain identification, and detection of loci affecting key phenotypes) and for evolutionary adaptation of microbes.
Genome size and the accumulation of simple sequence repeats: implications of new data from genome sequencing projects
TLDR
It was shown that the higher RSFs seen in eukaryotic genomes also reflect a generally higher level of repetitiveness independent of genome size differences, and some of the variance in repetitiveness seen in other species may therefore also reflect the action of selection.
Microsatellites in different eukaryotic genomes: survey and analysis.
TLDR
The results suggest that strand-slippage theories alone are insufficient to explain microsatellite distribution in the genome as a whole and that taxon-specific variation could also be detected in the frequency distributions of simple sequence motifs.
Long, polymorphic microsatellites in simple organisms
  • D. Field, C. Wills
  • Biology
    Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B: Biological Sciences
  • 1996
TLDR
Examination of the phylogenetic distribution of the longest, perfect microsatellites in GenBank found that simple organisms, defined here as slime molds, fungi, protists, prokaryotes, viruses, organelles and plasmids, contributed 78 of the 375 examined sequences.
Microsatellites are preferentially associated with nonrepetitive DNA in plant genomes
Microsatellites are a ubiquitous class of simple repetitive DNA sequence. An excess of such repetitive tracts has been described in all eukaryotes analyzed and is thought to result from the
The contribution of slippage-like processes to genome evolution
TLDR
The sequence composition of simple sequences appears to reflect both underlying sequence biases in slippage-like processes and the action of selection, particularly in the human lineage.
Differential distribution of simple sequence repeats in eukaryotic genome sequences.
TLDR
Analysis of complete genome coding DNA sequences of Drosophila, C. elegans, and yeast indicated that expansions of codon repeat corresponding to small hydrophilic amino acids are tolerated more, while strong selection pressures probably eliminate codon repeats encoding hydrophobic and basic amino acids.
The abundance of various polymorphic microsatellite motifs differs between plants and vertebrates.
TLDR
The abundance of different simple sequence motifs in plants was accessed through data base searches of DNA sequences and quantitative hybridization with synthetic dinucleotide repeats and the GT/CA motif being the most abundant din nucleotide repeat in mammals was found to be considerably less frequent in plants.
Triplet repeats in human genome: distribution and their association with genes and other genomic regions
TLDR
Analysis of triplet repeats in the complete human genome from the publicly available sequences revealed that AGC and CCG repeat were predominantly present in the coding regions of the genome while UTRs and the upstream sequences contained CCG repeats in relative abundance.
Conservation of polymorphic simple sequence loci in cetacean species
TLDR
The high conservation of non-coding sequences in whales simplifies the application of SSLP DNA fingerprinting in cetacean species, as primers designed for one species will often uncover variability in other species.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...