Polymorphism in polydnavirus genomes

1990 ◽  
Vol 36 (8) ◽  
pp. 538-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
Donald B. Stoltz ◽  
Deming Xu

Polymorphisms were readily detected in polydnavirus DNA extracted from several different species belonging to two different families of parasitic hymenoptera. Heterogeneity was observed as differences in electrophoretic profiles of genome segments, differences in the number of cross-hybridizing genome segments, and restriction fragment length polymorphisms; polymorphism was also detected at the level of an individual genome segment. Some implications drawn from these observations are discussed. Key words: polydnavirus, multipartite genomes, DNA polymorphisms.

1989 ◽  
Vol 35 (12) ◽  
pp. 1146-1155 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Stephen Horton ◽  
Paul A. Horgen

Within the genus Achyla, which belongs to the class of fungi known as the Oomycetes, taxonomic judgments have traditionally been made using a variety of sexual criteria. We have used restriction fragment length polymorphisms as a new taxonomic character to examine intra- and inter-specific variation within this genus. Using a cDNA clone coding for the Achlya 18S rRNA gene as a hybridization probe, a 10-kb fragment of ribosomal DNA (rDNA) from Achlya ambisexualis strain E87 was cloned and then mapped for selected restriction enzyme sites. In Southern blot hybridizations, both this rDNA fragment and cloned 18S cDNAs revealed differences in the rDNA organization of A. ambisexualis E87 (male) and a female isolate of A. ambisexualis strain 734. No differences in the rDNAs were detected between the two heterothallic isolates A. ambisexualis E87 and A. bisexualis 65-1. Southern blot hybridizations suggested that two different rDNA organizations may exist within the genome of the homothallic strain A. heterosexualis B14. cDNA clones coding for two different hormonally regulated genes revealed the same relationships between the four isolates studied as those determined with rDNA probes. Two homothallic Achlya strains recently isolated from nature were found to have additional DNA polymorphisms not detected in the laboratory strains. Phenetic analysis distinguished the same similarities that were evident upon inspection of the hybridization data. Taken together, these data suggest different relationships between the isolates examined than do the previous taxonomic criteria by which species have been delimited within this genus.Key words: Achlya; restriction fragment length polymorphisms; ribosomal DNA; taxonomy.


1995 ◽  
Vol 66 (2) ◽  
pp. 109-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinrui Shi ◽  
David G. Heckel ◽  
Marian R. Goldsmith

SummaryWe present data for the initial construction of a molecular linkage map for the domesticated silkworm, Bombyx mori, based on 52 progeny from an F2 cross from a pair mating of inbred strains p50 and C108, using restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs). The map contains 15 characterized single copy sequences, 36 anonymous sequences derived from a follicular cDNA library, and 10 loci corresponding to a low copy number retrotransposon, mag. The 15 linkage groups and 8 ungrouped loci account for 23 of the 28 chromosomes and span a total recombination length of 413 cM; 10 linkage groups were correlated with established classic genetic maps. Scoring data from Southern blots were analysed using two Pascal programs written specifically to analyse linkage data in Lepidoptera, where females are the heterogametic sex and have achiasmatic meiosis (no crossing-over). These first examine evidence for linkage by calculating the maximum lod score under the hypothesis that the two loci are linked over the likelihood under the hypothesis that the two loci assort independently, and then determine multilocus linkage maps for groups of putatively syntenic loci by calculating the maximum likelihood estimate of the recombination fractions and the log likelihood using the EM algorithm for a specified order of loci along the chromosome. In addition, the possibility of spurious linkage was exhaustively tested by searching for genotypes forbidden by the absence of crossing-over in one sex.


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