DNA melting curves of genotype-specific PCR fragments were used to differentiate between species and amongst varieties of cereals. Melting curves were generated by ramping the temperature of PCR fragments through their dissociation temperature in the presence of a double-stranded DNA binding dye. Genotypes were discriminated by differences in the position and shape of the melting curve which is a function of the fragment's sequence, length and GC content. Amplification of 5S ribosomal RNA genes generated species-specific fragments for six of the major cereal crops. Of the 15 possible pairwise comparisons, 13 distinctions could be reliably made using melting curve position data. Wheat varieties were identified by the melting profiles of PCR products generated using microsatellite primers. DNA melting curve analysis was conveniently coupled with capillary-PCR using a LightCycler instrument to provide a rapid method of genotyping in cereals.
Journal article
Monitoring of fluorescence during DNA melting as a method for discrimination and detection of PCR products in variety identification
Molecular Breeding, Vol.4(6), pp.509-517
1998
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Monitoring of fluorescence during DNA melting as a method for discrimination and detection of PCR products in variety identification
- Creators
- Mervyn Shepherd (Author) - Southern Cross UniversityRobert J Henry (Author) - Southern Cross University
- Publication Details
- Molecular Breeding, Vol.4(6), pp.509-517
- Publisher
- Springer Netherlands
- Identifiers
- 1144; 991012821861902368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Science and Engineering; Southern Cross Plant Science; Science
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article