Gul Shad Ali, Shamseldeen Eltaher, Jin Li, Barbie Freeman, Sukhwinder Singh
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Apomixis is a horticultural trait that enables clonal propagation of hybrids by producing asexual embryos from maternal cells in the ovule without meiosis. Many mango cultivars exhibit apomictic polyembryony, where one embryo develops from zygotic tissues and the rest from nucellar tissues, resulting in seedlings that are genetically identical to the mother tree. In Mangifera indica L. commercially important rootstocks are raised from apomictic seeds, which are then grafted with desired cultivars. Identifying molecular markers for polyembryony and understanding its genetics would facilitate introducing this trait in commercially important cultivars. In this report, genome-wide association studies were conducted on a diversity panel consisting of 42 polyembryonic and 42 monoembryonic M. indica cultivars using high-density single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers. These studies revealed that the polyembryony locus is in a 360-kb region on linkage group 17 of the 'Alphonso' reference genome. This locus contains the MiRWP/MiRKD4 gene, which codes for an RWP-RK domain-containing protein previously implicated in citrus apomixis. Comparative genomic analyses revealed synteny between the citrus and the mango polyembryony loci, suggesting a common evolutionary mechanism for this trait. A total of 29 SNP markers in this locus were significantly associated with polyembryony in M. indica. Five of these markers were developed into convenient genotyping assays using competitive allele-specific PCR chemistry implemented in two different genotyping platforms - Kompetitive Allele-Specific PCR (KASP) and PCR allele competitive extension (PACE). The utility of these assays was validated and demonstrated in diverse germplasm collection and open-pollinated mango breeding populations with known pedigrees and polyembryony phenotypes. These SNP markers, especially those flanking the MiRWP/MiRKD4 gene, provide a valuable tool for mango breeders to select polyembryonic progenies at the seedling stages in mango breeding programs.
期刊介绍:
In an ever changing world, plant science is of the utmost importance for securing the future well-being of humankind. Plants provide oxygen, food, feed, fibers, and building materials. In addition, they are a diverse source of industrial and pharmaceutical chemicals. Plants are centrally important to the health of ecosystems, and their understanding is critical for learning how to manage and maintain a sustainable biosphere. Plant science is extremely interdisciplinary, reaching from agricultural science to paleobotany, and molecular physiology to ecology. It uses the latest developments in computer science, optics, molecular biology and genomics to address challenges in model systems, agricultural crops, and ecosystems. Plant science research inquires into the form, function, development, diversity, reproduction, evolution and uses of both higher and lower plants and their interactions with other organisms throughout the biosphere. Frontiers in Plant Science welcomes outstanding contributions in any field of plant science from basic to applied research, from organismal to molecular studies, from single plant analysis to studies of populations and whole ecosystems, and from molecular to biophysical to computational approaches.
Frontiers in Plant Science publishes articles on the most outstanding discoveries across a wide research spectrum of Plant Science. The mission of Frontiers in Plant Science is to bring all relevant Plant Science areas together on a single platform.