RESUMO
Cultivated potato is a vegetatively propagated crop, and most varieties are autotetraploid with high levels of heterozygosity. Reducing the ploidy and breeding potato at the diploid level can increase efficiency for genetic improvement including greater ease of introgression of diploid wild relatives and more efficient use of genomics and markers in selection. More recently, selfing of diploids for generation of inbred lines for F1 hybrid breeding has had a lot of attention in potato. The current study provides genomics resources for nine legacy non-inbred adapted diploid potato clones developed at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. De novo genome sequence assembly using 10× Genomics and Illumina sequencing technologies show the genome sizes ranged from 712 to 948 Mbp. Structural variation was identified by comparison to two references, the potato DMv6.1 genome and the phased RHv3 genome, and a k-mer based analysis of sequence reads showed the genome heterozygosity range of 1 to 9.04% between clones. A genome-wide approach was taken to scan 5 Mb bins to visualize patterns of heterozygous deleterious alleles. These were found dispersed throughout the genome including regions overlapping segregation distortions. Novel variants of the StCDF1 gene conferring earliness of tuberization were found among these clones, which all produce tubers under long days. The genomes will be useful tools for genome design for potato breeding.
RESUMO
The potato mitogenome is complex and to understand various biological functions and nuclear-cytoplasmic interactions, it is important to characterize its gene content and structure. In this study, the complete mitogenome sequences of nine diploid potato clones along with a diploid Solanum okadae clone were characterized. Each mitogenome was assembled and annotated from Pacific Biosciences (PacBio) long reads and 10X genomics short reads. The results show that each mitogenome consists of multiple circular molecules with similar structure and gene organization, though two groups (clones 07506-01, DW84-1457, 08675-21 and H412-1 in one group, and clones W5281-2, 12625-02, 12120-03 and 11379-03 in another group) could be distinguished, and two mitogenomes (clone 10908-06 and OKA15) were not consistent with those or with each other. Significant differences in the repeat structure of the 10 mitogenomes were found, as was recombination events leading to multiple sub-genomic circles. Comparison between individual molecules revealed a translocation of â¼774 bp region located between a short repeat of 40 bp in molecule 3 of each mitogenome, and an insertion of the same in molecule 2 of the 10908-06 mitogenome. Finally, phylogenetic analyses revealed a close relationship between the mitogenomes of these clones and previously published potato mitogenomes.
Assuntos
Genoma Mitocondrial , Solanum tuberosum , Células Clonais , Diploide , Filogenia , Recombinação Genética , Solanum tuberosum/genéticaRESUMO
Potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is the world's fourth most important food crop and essential for global food security. The potato chloroplast genomes, the plastomes, are highly conserved and are largely studied for their maternal lineages. In this study, we assembled the complete circular plastome sequences of nine diploid potato clones, with sizes ranging between 155,296 bp and 155,564 bp. Annotation of these plastomes reveals that they each have 141 genes in a similar order. The computational chloroplast DNA typing reveals three plastid DNA types among the nine plastomes and they are grouped according to these types in the phylogeny.
RESUMO
Tuber eye depth of the potato (Solanum tuberosum L.) is an important trait for the processing quality and appearance of potatoes. In the present study, we used a cultivated diploid potato family (12601) of 107 plants to dissect the mode of inheritance and to map the gene(s) controlling the trait. The family segregated for both eye depth (deep vs shallow) and tuber shape (round vs long) traits. The deep eye (Eyd) phenotype was found to be associated with round tubers (Ro) in most progeny clones. Further evaluation of this population with molecular markers including simple sequence repeats, amplified fragment length polymorphism, and sequence-characterized amplified regions revealed that the primary locus for eye depth is located on chromosome 10. This map location was confirmed by evaluating a second diploid family (12586). The results of this study led to the following conclusions: (1) there is a major locus controlling the eye depth trait; (2) deep eye (Eyd) is dominant to shallow (eyd); (3) the Eyd/eyd locus is located on chromosome 10; and (4) the Eyd/eyd locus is closely linked with the major locus for tuber shape (Ro/ro), at a distance of about 4 cM.
Assuntos
Mapeamento Cromossômico , Padrões de Herança/genética , Fenótipo , Tubérculos/anatomia & histologia , Solanum tuberosum/genética , Agricultura/métodos , Primers do DNA , Ligação Genética , Marcadores Genéticos/genética , Técnicas de Amplificação de Ácido Nucleico , Tubérculos/genética , Polimorfismo de Fragmento de Restrição , Análise de Sequência de DNARESUMO
In this study, RAPD and pedigree data were used to investigate the genetic relationships in a group of 45 diploid hybrid potato clones used in the breeding and genetics program of the Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada Potato Research Centre in Fredericton, New Brunswick, and used for the potato after-cooking darkness program at the Nova Scotia Agricultural College. These hybrids were derived from crossing primitive cultivated South American diploid species such as Solanum phureja or Solanum stenotomum and wild diploid species such as Solanum chacoense and other wild Argentine species with haploids of Solanum tuberosum. These hybrids have subsequently undergone up to 30 years of breeding and selection, for adaptation to local growing and storage conditions, processing traits and pest resistances. The objectives of this study were to estimate the level of genetic similarity (GS) among these sets of clones and to investigate the correlation between RAPD-based GS and f, based on pedigree information. Genetic similarity coefficients varied from 0.29 to 0.90 with a mean of 0.65 when based on the RAPD data, whereas the coefficient of parentage varied from zero to 0.75 with a mean of 0.11. The degree of relationship between the similarity matrices based on RAPD and pedigree was measured by comparing the similarity matrices with the normalized Mantel test. A low positive correlation (R = 0.104, p = 0.999) between the two matrices was observed. Cluster analysis using GS divided the clones into many subgroups that did not correspond well with the grouping based on pedigree. The level of genetic variation present in this set of potato clones is very high. Rigorous selection pressure aimed at different breeding purposes may result in the genetic differentiation of the clones from the same origin.