SummarySeventeen commercial and research laboratories participated in two comparison tests under the auspices of the International Society for Animal Genetics to develop an internationally tested, microsatellite-based parentage and identification panel for the domestic cat (Felis catus). Genetic marker selection was based on the polymorphism information content and allele ranges from seven random-bred populations (n ¼ 261) from the USA, Europe and Brazil and eight breeds (n ¼ 200) from the USA. Nineteen microsatellite markers were included in the comparison test and genotyped across the samples. Based on robustness and efficiency, nine autosomal microsatellite markers were ultimately selected as a single multiplex ÔcoreÕ panel for cat identification and parentage testing. Most markers contained dinucleotide repeats. In addition to the autosomal markers, the panel included two genderspecific markers, amelogenin and zinc-finger XY, which produced genotypes for both the X and Y chromosomes. This international cat parentage and identification panel has a power of exclusion comparable to panels used in other species, ranging from 90.08% to 99.79% across breeds and 99.47% to 99.87% in random-bred cat populations.
Atlantic salmon and brown trout frequently cooccur in the same habitats and juveniles of both species are difficult to discriminate. Hybridization between the two taxa has also been widely documented especially in endangered populations hence the need for species-specific molecular markers. Here we show that the microsatellite marker SsAD486 has two species-specific alleles allowing the identification of Atlantic salmon, brown trout, and their hybrids throughout the European range of these species. Since this marker is polymorphic in Atlantic salmon populations from Western Atlantic, it could also help discriminating between North American and European salmon.
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