Abstract

AbstractIn order to determine the genetic relationship between wild and cultivated radish species, and those among the cultivated species, structural and sequence variations in the mitochondrial orfB gene region were studied in one cultivated and two wild species of Raphanus. Using PCR amplification patterns and RFLP of a PCR product of the region, 232 wild and 420 cultivated radish plants were classified into one of three types of orfB variation. The wild radish (especially the Japanese one) showed large polymorphism in each population with eight of 13 Japanese populations studied containing all three types, whereas cultivars were generally monomorphic. Although type 1 having Ogura male sterile cytoplasm was present with the highest frequency in Japanese wild radish, most cultivars were divided into type 2 or 3 with normal cytoplasm. Type 2 was widely distributed in European, Chinese and major Japanese varieties, while some Chinese varieties and several Japanese local radishes had type 3 cytoplasm. The comparison provides valuable information about the origin and differentiation of cultivated radishes and the relationship between cultivated and wild radishes.

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