Abstract

Genomic characterization is playing an increasing role in plant germplasm conservation and utilization, as it can provide higher resolution with genome-wide SNP markers than before to identify and analyze genetic variation. A genotyping-by-sequencing technique was applied to genotype 541 soybean accessions conserved at Plant Gene Resources of Canada and 30 soybean cultivars and breeding lines developed by the Ottawa soybean breeding program of Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada. The sequencing generated an average of 952,074 raw sequence reads per sample. SNP calling identified 43,891 SNPs across 20 soybean chromosomes and 69 scaffolds with variable levels of missing values. Based on 19,898 SNPs with up to 50% missing values, three distinct genetic groups were found in the assayed samples. These groups were a mixture of the samples that originated from different countries and the samples of known maturity groups. The samples that originated from Canada were clustered into all three distinct groups, but 30 Ottawa breeding lines fell into two groups only. Based on the average pairwise dissimilarity estimates, 40 samples with the most genetic distinctness were identified from three genetic groups with diverse sample origin and known maturity. Additionally, 40 samples with the highest genetic redundancy were detected and they consisted of different sample origins and maturity groups, largely from one genetic group. Moreover, some genetically duplicated samples were identified, but the overall level of genetic duplication was relatively low in the collection. These findings are useful for soybean germplasm management and utilization.

Highlights

  • Genomic characterization of ex situ plant germplasm is playing an increasingly important role in germplasm management and utilization [1,2,3,4]

  • The soybean collection conserved at Plant Gene Resources of Canada (PGRC) has 1031 accessions, but only 743 accessions were available for seed distribution in 2016

  • These findings are useful for soybean germplasm management and utilization

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Summary

Introduction

Genomic characterization of ex situ plant germplasm is playing an increasingly important role in germplasm management and utilization [1,2,3,4]. Characterizing germplasm using genomic tools has been technically and practically more feasible than before, thanks to the recent development of generation sequencing technologies and bioinformatics tools, and drastically decreasing costs [5] Such characterization can provide high resolution with genome-wide SNP markers to analyze genetic diversity and structure (e.g., see Milner et al [3]; Sansaloni et al [4]), group germplasm for the development of core collections (e.g., Jeong et al [6]), and can support identification of genetic duplicates (e.g., see Ellis et al [7]; Singh et al [8]) for better germplasm management. Little is known about the extent of genetic diversity and unique accessions in each collection

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