Somaclones exhibiting variations with flower characteristics were recovered from the tissue-culture-derived plants of Doritaenopsis. Two molecular techniques, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and methylationsensitive amplification polymorphism (MSAP) analyses, were used to characterize the somaclones. RAPD analysis, using 100 randomly selected primers, failed to differentiate variants and normal plants, even though some primers (six out of 100 primers) exhibited 6-10 distinct banding patterns. However, MSAP analysis revealed the differences in the DNA methylation patterns in the normal and variant plants which were correlated with phenotypic variation. In all, 311, 337, 366, and 343 fragments were obtained with normal and V1, V2, and V3 variant plants, respectively; each representing recognition site cleaved by either or both of the isoshizomers were amplified using 12 combination of primers. A total of 36 (11.6%), 77 (22.9%), 73 (19.9%), and 47 (13.7%) sites were found to be methylated at cytosine in the genomes of normal and V1, V2, and V3 variant Doritaenopsis plants. This study demonstrates usefulness of MSAP to detect DNA methylation events in tissue cultured Doritaenopsis plants.
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