Abstract

Massive loss of valuable plant species in the past centuries and its adverse impact on environmental and socioeconomic values has triggered the conservation of plant resources. Appropriate identification and characterization of plant materials is essential for the successful conservation of plant resources and to ensure their sustainable use. Molecular tools developed in the past few years provide easy, less laborious means for assigning known and unknown plant taxa. These techniques answer many new evolutionary and taxonomic questions, which were not previously possible with only phenotypic methods. Molecular techniques such as DNA barcoding, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD), amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP), microsatellites and single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) have recently been used for plant diversity studies. Each technique has its own advantages and limitations. These techniques differ in their resolving power to detect genetic differences, type of data they generate and their applicability to particular taxonomic levels. This review presents a basic description of different molecular techniques that can be utilized for DNA fingerprinting and molecular diversity analysis of plant species.

Highlights

  • The conservation and sustainable use of plant genetic resources require accurate identification of their accession

  • A disadvantage of sequencing includes inferences of positional homology that are frequently more problematic for non-coding nucleotide sequences because penalties for insertion-deletion events determine the extent of sequence similarity during pairwise and multiple-alignment

  • The major advantage of the amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) technique is the large number of polymorphisms that the method generates compared with other markers

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Summary

A Brief Review of Molecular Techniques to Assess Plant

Received: 10 March 2010; in revised form: 24 April 2010 / Accepted: 28 April 2010 /

Introduction
DNA Sequencing
Conventional Sequencing Technique
Next Generation Sequencing Techniques
Microsatellites
Findings
Concluding Remarks
Full Text
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