Abstract

Key messageTetraploid `Moncada´ mandarin, used as male and female in interploidy hybridizations, displays mainly tetrasomic inheritance for most LGs, with slight variations according to the direction of the crossing.Triploid-breeding programs in citrus are key tool to develop seedless cultivars. Obtaining triploid citrus hybrids may be achieved through different strategies, such as the exploitation of female unreduced gamete in crosses between diploid parents and diploid by tetraploid sexual hybridizations, in which tetraploid genotypes can be used as male or female parents. Genetic configuration of triploid populations from interploid crosses greatly depends on the chromosomic segregation mode of the tetraploid parent used. Here, we have analyzed the inheritance of the tetraploid ‘Moncada’ mandarin and compared the genetic structures of the resulting gametes when used as male and as female parent. The preferential chromosome pairing rate is calculated from the parental heterozygosity restitution (PHR) of codominant molecular markers, indicating the proportion between disomic and tetrasomic segregation. Tetraploid ‘Moncada’ both as female and male parent largely exhibited tetrasomic segregation. However, as female parent, one linkage group (LG8) showed intermediate segregation with tendency towards tetrasomic inheritance, while another linkage group (LG4) evidenced a clear intermediate segregation. On the other hand, when used as male parent two linkage groups (LG5 and LG6) showed values that fit an intermediate inheritance model with tetrasomic tendency. Significant doubled reduction (DR) rates were observed in five linkage groups as female parent, and in six linkage groups as male parent. The new knowledge generated here will serve to define crossing strategies in citrus improvement programs to efficiently obtain new varieties of interest in the global fresh consumption market.

Highlights

  • Polyploids are plants with somatic cells that contain three or more complete sets of chromosomes (Ramsey and Schemske 1998)

  • All triploid hybrids in both families were confirmed to arise from the fusion of a diploid gamete from tetraploid ‘Moncada’ and a haploid gamete from the diploid genitor (Fig. 1)

  • The results found for tetraploid ‘Moncada’, as male and female parent are consistent with those described by Aleza et al (2016), which found a genetic distance value to tetraploid ‘Clemenules’ clementine of 0.176 ± 0.012 for the population of triploid hybrids obtained with this genotype as female parent

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Summary

Introduction

Polyploids are plants with somatic cells that contain three or more complete sets of chromosomes (Ramsey and Schemske 1998). Several mechanisms lead to polyploidy, such as somatic doubling or the production of unreduced gametes which is the main polyploidization mechanism reported in plants (Bretagnolle and Thompson 1995; De Storme and Geelen 2013; Ramsey and Schemske 1998, 2002). Triploid genotypes in citrus are routinely obtained by sexual hybridization, through unreduced female gametes (Aleza et al 2016; Cuenca et al 2011, 2015), and interploid hybridizations between diploid and tetraploid genotypes (Aleza et al 2012a, b; Grosser and Gmitter 2011; Starrantino and Recupero 1982)

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