Abstract

Restriction site amplified polymorphism (RSAP) is a molecular marker technique which just requires a simple polymerase chain reaction to amplify fragments around restriction sites. The RSAP analytic system was set up and applied to Porphyra genetic variation analysis in this study for the first time. Fourteen Porphyra lines were screened by the RSAP analytic system with 30 primer combinations, 12 of which produced stable and reproducible amplification patterns in three repeated experiments. The 12 primer combinations produced 408 amplified fragments, 402 of which (98.53%) were polymorphic, with an average of 33.5 polymorphic fragments for each primer combination, ranging in size from 50 to 500 bp. The 408 fragments were scored one by one and then used to develop a dendrogram of the 14 Porphyra lines with unweighted pair-group method arithmetic average. The genetic distance among these Porphyra lines ranged from 0.10 to 0.50. These Porphyra lines were divided into two major groups at the 0.71 similarity level: one group contained only Porphyra haitanensis lines and the other group contained Porphyra yezoensis lines. In addition, some specific RSAP markers were acquired from each Porphyra line apart from P. yezoensis Yqd-2-1, and five of them were sequenced. One of the specific markers, R1/R3-8119 from P. yezoensis Y-9101, was successfully converted into sequence characterized amplification region marker. The result suggested that TRAP was a simple, stable, polymorphic, and reproducible molecular marker technique for the classification and resource protection of Porphyra lines.

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