Christopher RoweWannaporn IttiprasertCarolyn PattersonClaudia EliffKristen PageSusan BandoniThomas WilkeDennis MinchellaFred LewisMatty KnightBiomedical Research Institute, RockvilleMahidol UniversityWheaton College - IllinoisState University of New York GeneseoGeorge Washington UniversityPurdue University2018-07-242018-07-242003-12-01Malacologia. Vol.45, No.1 (2003), 149-166007629972-s2.0-5344256895https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/20609Genetic variation was assessed in Biomphalaria glabrata snails using variations in microsatellite loci and by RAPD-PCR analysis. Populations of snails examined were field-collected isolates from a small pond in a schistosomiasis endemic region in Brazil, after standard conditions were developed for analyzing snails from two laboratory-maintained stocks. The analyses were performed using a total of 60 microsatellite primer sets and, for RAPD-PCR, a total of 19 random primers. We show that genetic diversity can readily be detected by both molecular methods among the field-collected snails from this small site. In addition, RAPD-PCR bands that were found in another study to segregate with parasite resistance were not detected in any of the field-collected snails analyzed.Mahidol UniversityAgricultural and Biological SciencesUse of microsatellite variation and RAPD-PCR to assess genetic polymorphism in Biomphalaria glabrata snails from a single locale in a schistosomiasis endemic areaArticleSCOPUS