4.7 Article

Genetic diversity and population structure of ridge gourd (Luffa acutangula) accessions in a Thailand collection using SNP markers

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-94802-4

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Funding

  1. Kasetsart University Research and Development Institute (KURDI)
  2. Graduate School of Kasetsart University
  3. Center of Excellence on Agricultural Biotechnology, Office of the Permanent Secrety, Ministry of Higher Education, Science, Research and Innovaion. (AG-BIO/MHESI)

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This study analyzed 112 Luffa acutangula accessions using 2834 SNPs to establish moderate genetic diversity and group them into six subpopulations. The STRUCTURE analysis revealed gene flow and low variation between subpopulations, with distinct fruit shapes and length characteristics in each subpopulation.
This study explored a germplasm collection consisting of 112 Luffa acutangula (ridge gourd) accessions, mainly from Thailand. A total of 2834 SNPs were used to establish population structure and underlying genetic diversity while exploring the fruit characteristics together with genetic information which would help in the selection of parental lines for a breeding program. The study found that the average polymorphism information content value of 0.288 which indicates a moderate genetic diversity for this L. acutangula germplasm. STRUCTURE analysis (Delta K at K=6) allowed us to group the accessions into six subpopulations that corresponded well with the unrooted phylogenetic tree and principal coordinate analyses. When plotted, the STRUCTURE bars to the area of collection, we observed an admixed genotype from surrounding accessions and a geneflow confirmed by the value of F-ST=0.137. AMOVA based on STRUCTURE clustering showed a low 12.83% variation between subpopulations that correspond well with the negative inbreeding coefficient value (F-IS=-0.092) and low total fixation index (F-IT=0.057). There were distinguishing fruit shapes and length characteristics in specific accessions for each subpopulation. The genetic diversity and different fruit shapes in the L. acutangula germplasm could benefit the ridge gourd breeding programs to meet the demands and needs of consumers, farmers, and vegetable exporters such as increasing the yield of fruit by the fruit width but not by the fruit length to solve the problem of fruit breakage during exportation.

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