Nuclear SSRs are notorious for having relatively high frequencies of null alleles, i.e. alleles that fail to amplify and are
thus recessive and undetected in heterozygotes. In this paper, we compare two kinds of approaches for estimating null allele
frequencies at seven nuclear microsatellite markers in three French
Fagus sylvatica populations: (1) maximum likelihood methods that compare observed and expected homozygote frequencies in the population under
the assumption of Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and (2) direct null allele frequency estimates from progeny where parent genotypes
are known. We show that null allele frequencies are high in
F. sylvatica (7.0% on average with the population method, 5.1% with the progeny method), and that estimates are consistent between the
two approaches, especially when the number of sampled maternal half-sib progeny arrays is large. With null allele frequencies
ranging between 5% and 8% on average across loci, population genetic parameters such as genetic differentiation (
F
ST) may be mostly unbiased. However, using markers with such average prevalence of null alleles (up to 15% for some loci) can
be seriously misleading in fine scale population studies and parentage analysis.
Keywords Microsatellites -
Fagus sylvatica
- Null alleles - Progeny - Population genetics