Abstract

The study of species groups in which the presence of interspecific hybridization or introgression phenomena is known or suspected involves analysing shared bi-parentally inherited molecular markers. Current methods are based on different categories of markers among which the classical microsatellites or the more recent genome wide approaches for the analyses of thousands of SNPs or hundreds of microhaplotypes through high throughput sequencing. Our approach utilizes intron-targeted amplicon sequencing to characterise multi-locus intron polymorphisms (MIPs) and assess genetic diversity. These highly variable intron regions, combined with inter-specific transferable loci, serve as powerful multiple-SNP markers potentially suitable for various applications, from species and hybrid identification to population comparisons, without prior species knowledge. We developed the first panel of MIPs highly transferable across fish genomes, effectively distinguishing between species, even those closely related, and populations with different structures. MIPs offer versatile, hypervariable nuclear markers and promise to be especially useful when multiple nuclear loci must be genotyped across different species, such as for the monitoring of interspecific hybridization. Moreover, the relatively long sequences obtained ease the development of single-locus PCR-based diagnostic markers. This method, here demonstrated in teleost fishes, can be readily applied to other taxa, unlocking a new source of genetic variation.

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