A first insight into population structure and linkage disequilibrium in the US peanut minicore collection

被引:0
作者
Vikas Belamkar
Michael Gomez Selvaraj
Jamie L. Ayers
Paxton R. Payton
Naveen Puppala
Mark D. Burow
机构
[1] Texas Tech University,Center for Biotechnology and Genomics
[2] Texas Tech University,Department of Plant and Soil Science
[3] Texas AgriLife Research,Plant Stress Germplasm Development Unit
[4] Texas A&M System,Agricultural Sciences Center
[5] USDA-ARS,Interdepartmental Genetics Graduate Program
[6] New Mexico State University,undefined
[7] Iowa State University,undefined
来源
Genetica | 2011年 / 139卷
关键词
Peanut; Germplasm; Linkage disequilibrium; SSR;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Knowledge of genetic diversity, population structure, and degree of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in target association mapping populations is of great importance and is a prerequisite for LD-based mapping. In the present study, 96 genotypes comprising 92 accessions of the US peanut minicore collection, a component line of the tetraploid variety Florunner, diploid progenitors A. duranensis (AA) and A. ipaënsis (BB), and synthetic amphidiploid accession TxAG-6 were investigated with 392 simple sequence repeat (SSR) marker bands amplified using 32 highly-polymorphic SSR primer pairs. Both distance- and model-based (Bayesian) cluster analysis revealed the presence of structured diversity. In general, the wild-species accessions and the synthetic amphidiploid grouped separately from most minicore accessions except for COC155, and were eliminated from most subsequent analyses. UPGMA analysis divided the population into four subgroups, two major subgroups representing subspecies fastigiata and hypogaea, a third group containing individuals from each subspecies or possibly of mixed ancestry, and a fourth group, either consisting of COC155 alone if wild species were excluded, or of COC155, the diploid species, and the synthetic amphidiploid. Model-based clustering identified four subgroups- one each for fastigiata and hypogaea subspecies, a third consisting of individuals of both subspecies or of mixed ancestry predominantly from Africa or Asia, and a fourth group, consisting of individuals predominantly of var fastigiata,peruviana, and aequatoriana accessions from South America, including COC155. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed statistically-significant (P < 0.0001) genetic variance of 16.87% among subgroups. A total of 4.85% of SSR marker pairs revealed significant LD (at r2 ≥ 0.1). Of the syntenic marker pairs separated by distances < 10 cM, 11–20 cM, 21–50 cM, and > 50 cM, 19.33, 5.19, 6.25 and 5.29% of marker pairs were found in strong LD (P ≤ 0.01), in accord with LD extending to great distances in self pollinated crops. A threshold value of r2 > 0.035 was found to distinguish mean r2 values of linkage distance groups statistically from the mean r2 values of unlinked markers; LD was found to extend to 10 cM over the entire minicore collection by this criterion. However, there were large differences in r2 values among marker pairs even among tightly-linked markers. The implications of these findings with regard to the possibility of using association mapping for detection of genome-wide SSR marker-phenotype association are discussed.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 397 条
[1]  
Abdurakhmonov IY(2008)Application of association mapping to understanding the genetic diversity of plant germplasm resources Int J Plant Genomics 2008 574927-417
[2]  
Abdukarimov A(2009)Linkage disequilibrium based association mapping of fiber quality traits in Genetica 136 401-355
[3]  
Abdurakhmonov IY(2008) L. variety germplasm Euphytica 160 339-106
[4]  
Saha S(2007)Molecular diversity and genome-wide linkage disequilibrium patterns in a worldwide collection of Genet Res 89 93-1271
[5]  
Jenkins JN(1998) and its wild relatives Crop Sci 38 1261-1177
[6]  
Buriev ZT(2006)Genetic diversity of cultivated and wild-type peanuts evaluated with M13-tailed SSR markers and sequencing Genetics 172 1165-111
[7]  
Shermatov SE(2002)AFLP-based genetic diversity assessment among wheat cultivars from the Pacific Northwest Curr Opin Plant Bio 5 107-837
[8]  
Scheffler BE(2001)Association mapping of kernel size and milling quality in wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) cultivars Genetics 159 823-119
[9]  
Pepper AE(2009)Plant molecular diversity and applications to genomics Genome 52 107-2620
[10]  
Yu JZ(2008)Transmission genetics of chromatin from a synthetic amphidiploid to cultivated peanut ( BMC Plant Biol 8 55-491