Abstract

BackgroundQuantitative phenotypic variation of agronomic characters in crop plants is controlled by environmental and genetic factors (quantitative trait loci = QTL). To understand the molecular basis of such QTL, the identification of the underlying genes is of primary interest and DNA sequence analysis of the genomic regions harboring QTL is a prerequisite for that. QTL mapping in potato (Solanum tuberosum) has identified a region on chromosome V tagged by DNA markers GP21 and GP179, which contains a number of important QTL, among others QTL for resistance to late blight caused by the oomycete Phytophthora infestans and to root cyst nematodes.ResultsTo obtain genomic sequence for the targeted region on chromosome V, two local BAC (bacterial artificial chromosome) contigs were constructed and sequenced, which corresponded to parts of the homologous chromosomes of the diploid, heterozygous genotype P6/210. Two contiguous sequences of 417,445 and 202,781 base pairs were assembled and annotated. Gene-by-gene co-linearity was disrupted by non-allelic insertions of retrotransposon elements, stretches of diverged intergenic sequences, differences in gene content and gene order. The latter was caused by inversion of a 70 kbp genomic fragment. These features were also found in comparison to orthologous sequence contigs from three homeologous chromosomes of Solanum demissum, a wild tuber bearing species. Functional annotation of the sequence identified 48 putative open reading frames (ORF) in one contig and 22 in the other, with an average of one ORF every 9 kbp. Ten ORFs were classified as resistance-gene-like, 11 as F-box-containing genes, 13 as transposable elements and three as transcription factors. Comparing potato to Arabidopsis thaliana annotated proteins revealed five micro-syntenic blocks of three to seven ORFs with A. thaliana chromosomes 1, 3 and 5.ConclusionComparative sequence analysis revealed highly conserved collinear regions that flank regions showing high variability and tandem duplicated genes. Sequence annotation revealed that the majority of the ORFs were members of multiple gene families. Comparing potato to Arabidopsis thaliana annotated proteins suggested fragmented structural conservation between these distantly related plant species.

Highlights

  • Quantitative phenotypic variation of agronomic characters in crop plants is controlled by environmental and genetic factors

  • Sequence annotation revealed that the majority of the open reading frames (ORF) were members of multiple gene families

  • One of the most conspicuous resistance hot-spots in the potato genome is located on potato chromosome V, in a chromosome segment tagged by the DNA-based markers GP21 and GP179

Read more

Summary

Introduction

QTL mapping in potato (Solanum tuberosum) has identified a region on chromosome V tagged by DNA markers GP21 and GP179, which contains a number of important QTL, among others QTL for resistance to late blight caused by the oomycete Phytophthora infestans and to root cyst nematodes. When using the same locus specific DNA-based markers in different mapping populations, the positional information of the mapped factors controlling qualitative and quantitative traits can be compared and integrated This comparison showed that a number of the factors which control qualitative (R genes) or quantitative resistance (QRL = quantitative resistance loci) to different types of pathogens map to similar positions. These chromosomal regions are socalled hot-spots for pathogen resistance. As shown by QTL mapping [1214,19,20], this region on potato chromosome V contains genes for resistance to various pathogens and genes controlling plant vigor, plant maturity (the time the plant needs from planting to reach maturity under long day conditions), tuber yield, tuber starch and tuber sugar content

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call