Bovine microsatellites: Racial differences and association with SINE-elements

Abstract
Patterns of polymorphism at eight microsatellite loci in three cattle races are described: two large commercial breeds and one endangered landrace. Significant interracial allele frequency differences were found at six loci. The mean heterozygosity was slightly higher in the landrace (H = 0.75) than in the others (H = 0.69). The difference is smaller than that found by DNA-fingerprinting. Intrapopulation distributions of microsatellite allele size (dinucleotide repeat number) were generally bimodal, with certain intermediate repeat types lacking. Sequencing of individual alleles revealed some hidden heterogeneity: an allele defined by PCR-product size actually corresponded to different sequence motifs in different races. Two of the microsatellìtes occurred as tails of SINE-elements. In contrast to some earlier reports, the position of one of the amplification primers within a high-copy-number SINE-element did not disturb microsatellite amplification; even multiplex PCR was possible.