scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

RAPD

About: RAPD is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 15960 publications have been published within this topic receiving 360391 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using a protocol for high rate shoot multiplication, certain morphological abnormalities observed during proliferation of shoot buds in vitro were not observed during acclimatization ex vitro, and the genetic stability of plantlets was assessed using RAPD and ISSR markers.
Abstract: Use of high levels of growth regulators during micropropagation results in undesirable clonal variability in important commercial crops such as banana. The present study investigated the effects of high levels of cytokinins on micropropagation in banana (genotype AAB), and the genetic stability of plantlets was assessed using RAPD and ISSR markers. Cytokinins, such as BA and kinetin were added to the routine shoot multiplication medium at concentrations up to 10 mg l−1. After 12 weeks of culture involving three subcultures, the maximum number of shoot buds were produced in cultures receiving either 5 mg l−1 BA (80 shoot buds) or 4 mg l−1 kinetin (62 shoot buds). Certain morphological abnormalities observed during proliferation of shoot buds in vitro were not observed during acclimatization ex vitro. To check the genetic stability, RAPD and ISSR profiles of micropropagated plantlets obtained from different cytokinin-treatments were compared with control microplants maintained on MS medium as well as the field-grown mother plant. A total of 50 RAPD and 12 ISSR primers resulted in 625 distinct and reproducible bands. Thus a total of 17,400 bands were generated showing homogeneous RAPD and ISSR patterns. Band intensity histogram of each gel confirmed their monomorphic nature with no genetic variation in all the plantlets analysed. Based on these results a protocol for high rate shoot multiplication was worked out leading to uniform shoot production.

88 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The start of molecular biology programme targeting nuclear genome of safflower, a major world oilseed crop about whose genetics very little is known is reported.
Abstract: Carthamus tinctorius (2n = 2x = 24) (family Asteraceae), commonly known as safflower, is widely cultivated in agricultural production systems of Asia, Europe, Australia and the Americas as a source of high-quality vegetable and industrial oil. India ranks first in the production of safflower oil. Fourteen cultivars, widely cultivated in various agro-climatic regions of India, have been fingerprinted by RAPD, ISSR, and AFLP markers utilizing 36, 21 primers, and 4 primer combinations, respectively. On an individual assay basis, AFLP has proven to be the best marker system as compared with the other two markers applied as assessed by high discriminating power (0.98), assay efficiency index (33.2), marker index (18.2), resolving power (40.62), and genotype index (0.856). Thirty-six RAPD and 21 SSR primers could differentiate a maximum of eight and four cultivars, respectively, whereas, two AFLP primer combinations could fingerprint all the 14 cultivars. To understand genetic relationships among these cultivars, Jaccard's similarity coefficient and UPGMA clustering algorithm were applied to the three marker data sets. Mean genetic similarities ranged from 0.689 (AFLP) to 0.952 (ISSR). Correlation coefficient comparisons between similarity matrices and co-phenetic matrices obtained with the three markers revealed that AFLP displayed no congruence vis-a-vis RAPD and ISSR data. However, strong correlation was observed between RAPD and ISSR marker systems. This paper reports the start of molecular biology programme targeting nuclear genome of safflower, a major world oilseed crop about whose genetics very little is known.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Three pairs of isolates previously unlinked by epidemiology had the same overall types, and two pairs were obtained from the same hospital within 2 years of each other, whereas the third pair were isolated from California and Germany.
Abstract: Three forms of DNA-based typing procedures for Aspergillus fumigatus isolates have been developed over the last five years. The procedures are random amplification of polymorphic DNA (RAPD), restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) detection, and Southern hybridizations with various repetitive sequence-based probes. Using two of these procedures, we compared 16 selected isolates, grouped into eight pairs on the basis of epidemiology or previously assigned RFLP types. RAPD with four primers (R108, RC08, 2, and 4), including three previously used with A. fumigatus, showed that one primer, R108, gave the best discrimination (8 types). Southern hybridization of total genomic DNA digested with HindIII and probed with the total bacteriophage M13 genome resulted in the highest overall level of discrimination. Combination of the RAPD and Southern hybridization with the previously assigned RFLP types discriminated 10 isolates of 16. Isolates closely linked epidemiologically could not be distinguished from each other. In addition, three pairs of isolates previously unlinked by epidemiology had the same overall types. Two pairs were obtained from the same hospital within 2 years of each other, whereas the third pair were isolated from California and Germany. A full understanding of the epidemiology and ecology of A. fumigatus requires multiple discriminatory typing procedures.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Computer-assisted comparison of the RAPD patterns revealed a clear separation of L. sanfranciscensis from other obligately heterofermentative Lactobacillus species closely related or normally present in sourdough.
Abstract: Genetic diversity of Lactobacillus sanfranciscensis strains isolated from naturally fermented sourdoughs of different origin was evaluated by using randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD). Computer-assisted comparison of the RAPD patterns revealed a clear separation of L. sanfranciscensis from other obligately heterofermentative Lactobacillus species closely related or normally present in sourdough. Six clusters, five of them constituted by strains of the same origin, were recognized at a similarity level of 63%. Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) results on strains chosen as representative were generally in good agreement with the grouping obtained by RAPD. Both techniques showed a high degree of discriminatory power and indicated the existence of a remarkable genetic polymorphism within the species. Furthermore, the chromosome size of L. sanfranciscensis was estimated by PFGE to be about 1.4 Mb.

87 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
S.V. Irwin1, P. Kaufusi1, K. Banks1, R. S. de la Pena1, J. J. Cho1 
TL;DR: Polymorphic markers identified in the DNA fingerprinting study will be useful to screen a segregating population which is being generated in the laboratory aimed at developing a taro genetic linkage map.
Abstract: Forty-four taro (Colocasia esculenta), two tanier (Xanthosoma species) and one Colocasia gigantea accessions were evaluated for genetic diversity using random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) primers. Seventy-three of 112 primers amplified PCR DNA products used to fingerprint the accessions. Thirty-two primers were considered highly informative because they amplified more than 5 bands or amplified one or more polymorphic bands that distinguished between accessions. RAPDs showed high genetic diversity in taro accessions from Indonesia, were capable in distinguishing between Hawaiian accessions, and could separate triploid from diploid accessions. UPGMA cluster analysis of genetic similarity estimates (Jaccard's coefficient), separated the accessions into 3 main groups with C. esculenta divided into 5 subgroups. These primers will be useful for future genetic analysis and provide taro breeders with a genetic basis for selection of parents for crop improvement. Polymorphic markers identified in the DNA fingerprinting study will be useful to screen a segregating population which is being generated in our laboratory aimed at developing a taro genetic linkage map.

87 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Genetic diversity
42.8K papers, 873.4K citations
90% related
Genetic variability
16.2K papers, 467.7K citations
88% related
Germination
51.9K papers, 877.9K citations
86% related
Seedling
28.6K papers, 478.2K citations
85% related
Restriction fragment length polymorphism
17.4K papers, 696.5K citations
84% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20241
2023149
2022309
2021152
2020195
2019246