4.5 Article

Genetic variability of introduced and local Spanish peach cultivars determined by SSR markers

Journal

TREE GENETICS & GENOMES
Volume 7, Issue 2, Pages 257-270

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11295-010-0329-3

Keywords

Spanish native peach; Genetic diversity; SSR markers

Funding

  1. Spanish MICINN (Ministry of Science and Innovation) [AGL2005-05533, AGL-2008-00283]
  2. FEDER, INIA (Instituto Nacional de Investigacion y Tecnologia Agraria y Alimentaria) [RF2007-00026-C02-00]
  3. Regional Government of Aragon [A44]
  4. AECI (Agencia Espanola de Cooperacion Internacional) of the Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs
  5. CSIC-FSE [I3P-PC2006]

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A set of 94 peach cultivars including Spanish native peach and foreign commercial cultivars were analyzed using 15 SSR markers, selected for their high level of polymorphism. The number of alleles obtained varied from two to 11 with an average of 6.73 giving 185 different genotypes. All the cultivars showed a unique genetic profile, each one using different genotypic combination of all loci. BPPCT001 was the most informative locus showing also the highest discrimination power. Only six loci allowed the unambiguous separation of all the Spanish native cultivars studied, and the genotypic combination of only eight loci permitted the total differentiation of the 94 peach cultivars analyzed. The six selected loci (BPPCT001, BPPCT006, BPPCT008, PS9f8, UDP98-022, and UDP98-412) seem to be very useful for future Spanish peach identification works, and they will help to establish a molecular data base for native peach cultivars. UPGMA analysis was performed from the genetic distance matrix, and allowed the arrangement of all genotypes according to their genetic diversity. The genetic diversity among cultivars, observed in this work, led to their separation according to their regional origin, their morphological characteristics, and especially according to their fruit traits. Analysis of molecular variance was performed for seven populations from different regions of Spain and USA to examine the distribution of genetic variation of the studied accessions, showing that the major variation occurred within populations in each geographic site. The results reveal the existence of two diversity regions in Spain for peach germplasm.

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