Abstract

BackgroundGrapes are one of the world’s most valuable crops and most are made into wine. Grapes belong to the genus Vitis, which includes over 60 inter-fertile species. The most common grape cultivars derive their entire ancestry from the species Vitis vinifera, but wild relatives have also been exploited to create hybrid cultivars, often with increased disease resistance.ResultsWe evaluate the genetic ancestry of some of the most widely grown commercial hybrids from North America and Europe. Using genotyping-by-sequencing (GBS), we generated 2482 SNPs and 56 indels from 7 wild Vitis, 7 V. vinifera, and 64 hybrid cultivars. We used a principal component analysis (PCA) based ancestry estimation procedure and verified its accuracy with both empirical and simulated data. V. vinifera ancestry ranged from 11 % to 76 % across hybrids studied. Approximately one third (22/64) of the hybrids have ancestry estimates consistent with F1 hybridization: they derive half of their ancestry from wild Vitis and half from V. vinifera.ConclusionsOur results suggest that hybrid grape breeding is in its infancy. The distribution of V. vinifera ancestry across hybrids also suggests that backcrosses to wild Vitis species have been more frequent than backcrosses to V. vinifera during hybrid grape breeding. This pattern is unusual in crop breeding, as it is most common to repeatedly backcross to elite, or domesticated, germplasm. We anticipate our method can be extended to facilitate marker-assisted selection in order to introgress beneficial wild Vitis traits, while allowing for offspring with the highest V. vinifera content to be selected at the seedling stage.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-2834-8) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Grapes are one of the world’s most valuable crops and most are made into wine

  • Grapes belong to the genus Vitis, which includes over 60 inter-fertile species spread broadly across the northern hemisphere [3]

  • Method verification Wild Vitis species can be used in grape breeding programs to introgress disease and abiotic stress resistance

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Summary

Introduction

Grapes are one of the world’s most valuable crops and most are made into wine. Grapes belong to the genus Vitis, which includes over 60 inter-fertile species. The most common grape cultivars derive their entire ancestry from the species Vitis vinifera, but wild relatives have been exploited to create hybrid cultivars, often with increased disease resistance. Grapes are one of the world’s most valuable crops and grown primarily for wine, they are used fresh, dried and in juice [1]. Grapes belong to the genus Vitis, which includes over 60 inter-fertile species spread broadly across the northern hemisphere [3]. Based on total global area in 2010, over 98 % of wine grapes belong to a single species, Vitis vinifera [4]. Almost all grape cultivars grown commercially are either V. vinifera or hybrids that include V. vinifera parentage [1].

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