Abstract

To facilitate marker-assisted breeding and genetic analyses of pepper (Capsicum annuum), we developed non-redundant 2- or 3-base simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers from enriched C. annuum genomic libraries and from C. annuum cDNA sequences in public databases. The SSR-enriched libraries were constructed using combinations of three restriction enzymes (AluI, HaeIII, and RsaI) and two biotinylated oligonucleotides [b(GA)15 and b(CA)15]. Ultimately, we obtained 1,736 genomic SSR markers and 1,344 cDNA-derived SSR markers from 6,528 clones and 13,003 sequences, respectively. We mapped 597 markers, including 265 of the newly developed SSR markers, onto a linkage map by using doubled-haploid (DH) lines derived from an intraspecific cross of two pure lines of C. annuum (K9-11 × MZC-180). The map, designated as the KL-DH map, consisted of 12 linkage groups. The map covered a genetic distance of 2,028 cM, and the average distance between markers was less than 4 cM. The frame structure of the KL-DH map was compared with the published standard conserved ortholog set II (COSII) map, which was derived from an interspecific F2 population (C. frutescens × C. annuum), by using tomato (Solanum lycopersicum) chromosomal sequences to bridge the two maps. The intraspecific KL-DH map constructed in this study and the interspecific COSII map were similar in map length and marker distribution, suggesting that the KL-DH map covers nearly the whole genome of C. annuum.

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