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. 2005 Jan;95(1):237-46.
doi: 10.1093/aob/mci017.

The effects of nuclear DNA content (C-value) on the quality and utility of AFLP fingerprints

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The effects of nuclear DNA content (C-value) on the quality and utility of AFLP fingerprints

Michael F Fay et al. Ann Bot. 2005 Jan.

Abstract

Background and aims: Nuclear DNA content (C-value) varies approximately 1000-fold across the angiosperms, and this variation has been reported to have an effect on the quality of AFLP fingerprints. Various methods have been proposed for circumventing the problems associated with small and large genomes. Here we investigate the range of nuclear DNA contents across which the standard AFLP protocol can be used.

Methods: AFLP fingerprinting was conducted on an automated platform using the standard protocol (with 3 + 3 selective bases) in which DNA fragments are visualized as bands. Species with nuclear DNA contents ranging from 1C = 0.2 to 32.35 pg were included, and the total number of bands and the number of polymorphic bands were counted. For the species with the smallest C-value (Bixa orellana) and for one of the species with a large C-value (Damasonium alisma), alternative protocols using 2 + 3 and 3 + 4 selective bases, respectively, were also used.

Key results: Acceptable AFLP traces were obtained using the standard protocol with 1C-values of 0.30-8.43 pg. Below this range, the quality was improved by using 2 + 3 selective bases. Above this range, the traces were generally characterized by a few strongly amplifying bands and noisy baselines. Damasonium alisma, however, gave more even traces, probably due to it being a tetraploid.

Conclusions: We propose that for known polyploids, genome size is a more useful indicator than the 1C-value in deciding which AFLP protocol to use. Thus, knowledge of ploidy (allowing estimation of genome size) and C-value are both important. For small genomes, the number of interpretable bands can be increased by decreasing the number of selective bases. For larger genomes, increasing the number of bases does not necessarily decrease the number of bands as predicted. The presence of a small number of strongly amplifying bands is likely to be linked to the presence of repetitive DNA sequences in high copy number in taxa with large genomes.

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Figures

F<sc>ig</sc>. 1.
Fig. 1.
Representative AFLP traces for species with nuclear DNA contents ranging from 0·2 to 32·35 pg. The traces are arranged in order of increasing nuclear DNA content with the smallest (Bixa orellana) at the top and the largest (Cypripedium calceolus) at the bottom.
F<sc>ig</sc>. 2.
Fig. 2.
Representative AFLP traces for Bixa orellana, showing the improvement achieved by using the small genome protocol (below) instead of the standard protocol (above).
F<sc>ig</sc>. 3.
Fig. 3.
Representative AFLP traces for Damasonium alisma, showing those obtained using the standard protocol (top) and the large genome protocol (below).

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