4.7 Article

GISH Analysis of the Introgression of the B Subgenome Genetic Material of Wild Allotetraploid Species Solanum stoloniferum into Backcrossing Progenies with Potato

Journal

AGRONOMY-BASEL
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/agronomy12040787

Keywords

potato; Solanum tuberosum; interspecific hybridization; introgressive lines; Solanum stoloniferum; homeologous pairing; genomic in situ hybridization (GISH)

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation of Basic Research (RFBR) [20-54-00043-bel-a]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study used genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) to visualize the introgression of genetic material from the B subgenome of a wild potato species, S. stoloniferum, into backcross hybrids. The results showed that the B subgenome was inherited as single chromosomes or recombinant chromosomes in the backcross generations. Rare A/B homeologous chromosome pairing was detected in all hybrids.
Wild relatives of cultivated potato are used in breeding to increase the genetic diversity of Solanum tuberosum (AAAA genome) varieties. Wild Mexican allotetraploid species Solanum stoloniferum (AABB genome) was used in breeding for extreme resistance to viruses and late blight. In this study, genomic in situ hybridization (GISH) was used for visualization of introgression of genetic material of the B subgenome of S. stoloniferum into the genome of backcross hybrids. The fertile hexaploid hybrid had 48 chromosomes of the A genome and 24 chromosomes of the B subgenome. Plants of the BC1 generation were pentaploid having the AAAAB genome constitution and three selected BC2 hybrids were aneuploid, containing one to six chromosomes of the B subgenome and 48 chromosomes of the A genome. The B subgenome of S. stoloniferum was inherited in the backcross generations as single chromosomes and in rare cases as recombinant chromosomes. GISH showed that chromosome pairing in the backcross hybrids was predominantly intragenomic. Most chromosomes of the B subgenome remained as univalents in backcross hybrids. Rare homeologous A/B chromosome pairing was detected in all analyzed hybrids. The obtained data indicate that the B subgenome of S. stoloniferum was able to recombine with the A genome.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available