“…Microsatellites have been shown to play a key role in transcription, protein function and gene regulation (Kashi, Y. et al, 2007) and utilized as a biomarker for population genetics, linkage association studies (Usdin, K et al, 2008). Escherichia coli (E. coli) microsatellites have been extensively studied in prokaryotic genome (Chen et al, 2011), then after the distribution, polymorphism and characterization of microsatellite have been studied in various prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes, including Burkholderia pseudomallei (Ledenyova et al, 2019), Hemopillus influenza (Power et al, 2009), Lactobacillus (Basharat et al, 2015), Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Sreenu et al, 2006), Mycobacterium bovis (Sreenu et al, 2006), Saccharomyces cerevisiae (Bagshaw A et al, 2008) and DNA viruses such as Human papilloma virus (HPV) (Chen et al, 2012), Adenovirus (Houng et al, 2009), ORF virus (Sahu et al, 2020), Avipoxvirus (Sahu et al, 2022), also in RNA viruses like HIV (Chen et al, 2012), tobamovirus (Alam CM et l., 2013), Carlavirus (Alam CM et al, 2014). Here we investigated the comparative analysis, distribution, and characterization of microsatellites in nine complete OT genomes, which have one of the most complex genomes to date and can serve as an ideal model organism for studying the nature of microsatellites.…”