Abstract

Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.), an oilseed crop, is severely affected by Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. carthami (Foc), a fungus causing Fusarium wilt (FW) resulting in up to 80% yield loss. In the present study, we used a panel of 84 diverse accessions from the composite core collection to perform association mapping for FW-resistance. Hydroponics-based screening resulted in categorization of 84 accessions as 31 immune, 19 highly resistant, 9 moderately resistant, 4 moderately susceptible, and 21 highly susceptible. Genotyping with a combination of 155 AFLP and 144 SSR markers revealed substantial genetic differentiation and structure analysis identified three main subpopulations (K = 3) with nearly 35% of admixtures in the panel. Kinship analysis at individual and population level revealed absence of or weak relatedness between the accessions. Association mapping with General Linear Model and Mixed Linear Model identified 4 marker-trait associations (MTAs) significantly linked with the FW-resistance trait. Of these, 3 robust MTAs identified in both the models exhibited phenotypic variance ranging from 4.09 to 6.45%. Locus-128 showing a low P-value and high phenotypic variance was identified as a promising marker-trait association that will facilitate marker-assisted breeding for FW-resistance in safflower.

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