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Title: Microsatellite DNA markers for the commercially important fish Hypophthalmus donascimientoi (Pisces: Siluriformes: Pimelodidae) in the Amazon basin: isolation, characterization and amplification in congeneric species. Author: Guimarães-Marques GM, de Jesus Bentes A, Formiga KM, da Silva Batista J. Journal: Mol Biol Rep; 2023 Apr; 50(4):3957-3962. PubMed ID: 36823336. Abstract: BACKGROUND: The genus Hypophthalmus comprises six species (H. edentatus, H. marginatus, H. fimbriatus, and H. oremaculatus), and the recently described: H. donascimientoi and H. celiae. The popular name for Hypophthalmus spp. in Brazil is mapará, this name refers to the six species. This group of fish has commercial importance for the states of Amazonas and Pará and, for this reason, requires studies to identify fish stocks. One approach is to use molecular markers, which have been very useful in studies with identification and population analysis of fish. Microsatellite molecular markers (SSRs) are one of the most informative markers for this purpose. There is little populations study of Hypophthalmus using SSRs, and there are less than six loci for the species Hypophthalmus marginatus available in the literature. With the construction of a genomic library of H. donascimientoi, we aimed to isolate and characterize SSRS markers and evaluate the extent of interspecific amplification. METHODS AND RESULTS: A genomic library was constructed with regions enriched of microsatellite for Hypophthalmus donascimientoi. A total of 126 contigs with 42 SSRs were used to design flanking primers for 39 microsatellites. Fifteen loci were characterized in three locations of the Solimões/Amazonas Rivers. The number of alleles ranged from one to 17 with a total of 126 alleles. The mean observed heterozygosity (HO) and expected heterozygosity (HE) were 0.721-0.692, respectively (S.d. HO 0.061 and HE 0.060). Two loci showed significant deviation in the HWE. The PIC ranged from 0.375 to 0.908. Such identified, 12 highly informative loci, and two moderately informative loci. Among the fifteen loci characterized, seven were successfully amplified in four other species of the genus. CONCLUSIONS: The microsatellite showed promise for estimating the genetic variability of H. donascimientoi and can be used as an efficient tool in population analyses of this species and in congeneric species analyzed.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]