The Rhizophoraceae comprise three tribes, 15 genera, and ca. 140 species (Schwarzbach and Ricklefs, 2000). Although often described as a mangrove family, only members of tribe Rhizophoreae, which includes four genera and 16 species, live exclusively in intertidal habitats. Mangroves differ from their terrestrial relatives in that the former are characterized by their coastal habitat and peculiar adaptive traits, such as their unusual adaptive viviparous fruits and their pneumatophores and knee roots (Zhong et al., 2002). Population genetic markers such as microsatellite loci have been developed in many Rhizophoraceae mangroves (Triest, 2008). However, less attention has been paid to the population genetics of closely related terrestrial groups (Zhong et al., 2002).
Carallia Roxb., known as the freshwater mangrove, is in the tribe Gynotrocheae, which is the closest inland relative to Rhizophoreae. Carallia is fairly common in evergreen forests of the tropical Old World, especially along rivers (Schwarzbach and Ricklefs, 2000; Shi et al., 2002). This genus comprises approximately 10 species, four of which are found in China, namely C. brachiata (Lour.) Merr., C. pectinifolia W. C. Ko, C. garciniifolia F. C. How & C. N. Ho, and C. diplopetala Hand.-Mazz. (Qin and Boufford, 2007). Carallia brachiata is the most common species in this genus and is geographically wide-spread from Madagascar throughout tropical Asia to Australia (Queensland), Melanesia, and Micronesia (Hou, 1958). Recently, we have sequenced the leaf transcriptome of C. brachiata to investigate genetic characteristics of this species (Huang et al., unpublished data). Here we developed and characterized 18 expressed sequence tags–derived simple sequence repeat (EST-SSR) markers in C. brachiata, and tested the potential utility of those markers across species within Carallia. As Ellis and Burke (2007) proposed, EST-SSRs are easier and less expensive to develop, as well as more transferable across taxonomic boundaries, in comparison to genomic SSR markers.
METHODS AND RESULTS
Using an improved cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) method (Fu et al., 2005), total RNA was extracted from the leaf of one individual of C. brachiata collected from Baiyun Mountain (23°10′47″N, 113°17′50″E) in Guangzhou, Guangdong, China. A voucher specimen (L. Hu 110154) was deposited in the herbarium of Sun Yat-sen University (SYSU). RNA integrity was checked using 1.0% agarose gel electrophoresis and a 2100 Bioanalyzer (Agilent, Santa Clara, California, USA) analysis. cDNA libraries were prepared for sequencing following the Illumina protocol, and paired-end short read sequencing was done using the Illumina Genome Analyzer II system (Illumina, San Diego, California, USA) at BGI-Shenzhen, China (Huang et al., 2012). A total of 13.66 million 90-nucleotide paired-end reads were obtained and assembled using Trinity (release 20110519) with the default parameters (Grabherr et al., 2011). Redundant sequences (minimum identity = 99%) were removed using CAP3 (Huang and Madan, 1999). The analysis yielded 47,788 contigs with an average length of 695 bp, an N50 length of 1077, and an average depth of coverage of 29.4×.
To detect SSRs in the contigs, the software MISA (Thiel et al., 2003) was used with the following search criteria: six, five, five, five, and five repeat units for di-, tri-, tetra-, penta-, and hexanucleotide motifs, respectively. A total of 6114 SSRs were identified from those contigs, with 798 contigs containing more than one SSR and 375 contigs containing compound SSRs. The frequency of EST-SSRs observed in the C. brachiata transcriptome was 1.07%, and the distribution density was 184.06 per mega base pair. The most abundant repeat type was trinucleotide (3326 [54.40%]), followed by dinucleotide (2612 [42.72%]), tetranucleotide (151 [2.47%]), pentanucleotide (13 [0.21%]), and hexanucleotide (12 [0.20%]) repeat units. Using Primer3 (Rozen and Skaletsky, 1999), primer pairs were designed for 40 SSR loci whose PRIMER_PAIR_PENALTY was <0.2, with the following parameters: PRIMER_PRODUCT_SIZE_RANGE = 100−300 bp, PRIMER_MAX_END_STABILITY = 250, the start base of the TARGET = three bases before the start position of SSR, and the length of the TARGET = six bases longer than the size of SSR. Default values were used for all other parameters.
To assess variability among these 40 loci, 35 individuals of C. brachiata were sampled from three populations: Zhuhai, Guangdong (22°15′17″N, 113°16′13″E; Q. Fan 090108); Yangchun, Guangdong (21°53′17″N, 111°22′59″E; Y. Liu 140318); and Wenchang, Hainan (19°31′56″N, 110°44′40″E; Q. Fan 121202). In addition, individuals from one population of C. pectinifolia (Heishiding Natural Reserve, Fengkai, Guangdong; 23°31′12″N, 111°52′13″E; Y. Liu 090718) and one population of C. garciniifolia (Xishuangbanna, Yunnan; 21°55′50″N, 101°15′09″E; Y. Huang 140211) were also sampled to detect the efficiency of these markers in cross-species amplification. All voucher specimens were deposited at SYSU.
All sampled leaves were dried by silica gel and then total genomic DNA from each individual was isolated using the CTAB method (Doyle, 1991). PCR amplifications were performed in a final volume of 30 µL, containing 60 ng of genomic DNA, 1× PCR buffer (10 mM Tris-HCl [pH 8.4] and 1.5 mM MgCl2; TransGen Biotech Co., Beijing, China), 0.2 mM dNTPs (Bocai Biotech Co., Shanghai, China), 0.5 µM of each primer (Life Technologies, Shanghai, China), and 1 unit EasyTaq DNA polymerase (TransGen Biotech Co.). The PCR reactions were carried out under standard conditions for all primers in a Bio-Rad PTC-200 thermocycler (Bio-Rad Laboratories, Hercules, California, USA) with the following cycling conditions: initial denaturation at 94°C for 4 min, followed by 32 cycles of 94°C for 40 s, 56–60°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s, with a final extension of 10 min at 72°C. The annealing temperatures ranged from 56°C to 60°C for different primer pairs. Amplification products were electrophoresed through 8% polyacrylamide denaturing gels and visualized by silver staining. The band size was calculated by comparison with a 20-bp DNA ladder (TaKaRa Biotechnology Co., Dalian, China).
Table 1.
Characteristics of 18 microsatellite loci developed in Carallia brachiata.
Of the 40 primer pairs, 22 failed to amplify the expected products. Of the remaining 18 loci, 11 displayed clear polymorphisms in C. brachiata (Tables 1 and 2). The presence of null alleles was detected by MICRO-CHECKER version 2.2.3 (van Oosterhout et al., 2004) for all loci. Genetic diversity indices were calculated using the software POPGENE (Yeh and Boyle, 1997), including the number of alleles, observed heterozygosity, and expected heterozygosity (Table 2). The number of alleles per locus ranged from one to three in each population. The observed heterozygosity ranged from 0 to 0.727, and the expected heterozygosity ranged from 0 to 0.520 (Table 2). All 18 primer sets also successfully amplified SSR loci in C. pectinifolia and C. garciniifolia. All 18 SSR loci were at Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium and had no indication of null alleles. There was also no significant linkage equilibrium (P < 0.05) between locus pairs (Table 2).
CONCLUSIONS
Our results have shown that transcriptome sequencing is a valuable source of microsatellite markers in C. brachiata as well as across the genus. These newly developed EST-SSRs will be valuable resources for the investigation of population genetic variation and structure in terrestrial relatives of Rhizophoraceae mangroves.
Table 2.
Results of initial primer screening in populations of Carallia brachiata, C. pectinifolia, and C. garciniifolia.
LITERATURE CITED
Notes
[1] The authors thank Qiang Fan and Yu Liu for their assistance in collecting plant materials. This study was supported by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41276107, 31200466, J1210074, J1310025), Chang Hungta Science Foundation of Sun Yat-Sen University, and the Ministry of Education of China for Sun Yat-sen University–Heishiding Nature Reserve Biological Field Practice Project.