S. Kim, Ho Bang Kim, K. Park, J. Hyun, C. Choi, J. Joa, S. Jin, Eun-Sil Kim, S. Han
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Lemon (Citrus limon), an interspecific hybrid between sour orange and citron, has been widely used as a rootstock along with trifoliate orange. Though lemons are superior to trifoliate orange in terms of their high seed germination rate throughout the year, one of the obstacles to using lemons as rootstocks is the lack of reliable, lemon-specific molecular markers to discriminate buds of the micro-grafted scion from those of the lemon rootstock. In order to obtain lemon-specific molecular markers, we compared the whole-plastid genomes available from four citrus species (lemon, pummelo, sweet orange, and mandarin) and developed seven plastid insertion/deletion (InDel) markers. The plastid InDel markers were applied to 46 citrus accessions that included lemons (17 accessions), grapefruit, mandarin, pummelo, sour orange, orange, papeda, tangor, and tangelo groups. The resulting dendrogram revealed that the citrus accessions used in this analysis could be distinctly classified into seven clusters. Lemons formed a separate cluster and had identical allele sizes for each InDel locus among all accessions investigated. This set of InDel markers could be a useful molecular tool for the rapid and clear discrimination of micro-grafted scions and lemon rootstocks during the production of virus-free citrus trees. The plastid InDel markers with maternal inheritance features can also be used to analyze the phylogenetic origin of various citrus cultivars including lemons. Additional key words: Citrus limon, genotyping, maternal inheritance, organelle genome, rootstock, scion
期刊介绍:
Horticultural Science and Technology (abbr. Hortic. Sci. Technol., herein ‘HST’; ISSN, 1226-8763), one of the two official journals of the Korean Society for Horticultural Science (KSHS), was launched in 1998 to provides scientific and professional publication on technology and sciences of horticultural area. As an international journal, HST is published in English and Korean, bimonthly on the last day of even number months, and indexed in ‘SCIE’, ‘SCOPUS’ and ‘CABI’. The HST is devoted for the publication of technical and academic papers and review articles on such arears as cultivation physiology, protected horticulture, postharvest technology, genetics and breeding, tissue culture and biotechnology, and other related to vegetables, fruit, ornamental, and herbal plants.