Abstract
BackgroundWithin onion, Allium cepa L., the availability of disease resistance is limited. The identification of sources of resistance in related species, such as Allium roylei and Allium fistulosum, was a first step towards the improvement of onion cultivars by breeding. SNP markers linked to resistance and polymorphic between these related species and onion cultivars are a valuable tool to efficiently introgress disease resistance genes. In this paper we describe the identification and validation of SNP markers valuable for onion breeding.ResultsTranscriptome sequencing resulted in 192 million RNA seq reads from the interspecific F1 hybrid between A. roylei and A. fistulosum (RF) and nine onion cultivars. After assembly, reliable SNPs were discovered in about 36 % of the contigs. For genotyping of the interspecific three-way cross population, derived from a cross between an onion cultivar and the RF (CCxRF), 1100 SNPs that are polymorphic in RF and monomorphic in the onion cultivars (RF SNPs) were selected for the development of KASP assays. A molecular linkage map based on 667 RF-SNP markers was constructed for CCxRF. In addition, KASP assays were developed for 1600 onion-SNPs (SNPs polymorphic among onion cultivars). A second linkage map was constructed for an F2 of onion x A. roylei (F2(CxR)) that consisted of 182 onion-SNPs and 119 RF-SNPs, and 76 previously mapped markers. Markers co-segregating in both the F2(CxR) and the CCxRF population were used to assign the linkage groups of RF to onion chromosomes. To validate usefulness of these SNP markers, QTL mapping was applied in the CCxRF population that segregates for resistance to Botrytis squamosa and resulted in a QTL for resistance on chromosome 6 of A. roylei.ConclusionsOur research has more than doubled the publicly available marker sequences of expressed onion genes and two onion-related species. It resulted in a detailed genetic map for the interspecific CCxRF population. This is the first paper that reports the detection of a QTL for resistance to B. squamosa in A. roylei.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12870-016-0879-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Highlights
Within onion, Allium cepa L., the availability of disease resistance is limited
This paper describes the development of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) markers between two species of Allium (A. roylei and A. fistulosum) using the interspecific F1 hybrid and a set of onion cultivars (CC)
We used transcriptome sequencing to obtain two sets of SNP markers that will be useful for Allium breeding: RFSNP markers, which are polymorphic in the interspecific roylei and A. fistulosum (RF) hybrid PRI 91021-8 and monomorphic among onion cultivars, and onion-SNP markers, which are polymorphic among onion cultivars
Summary
The identification of sources of resistance in related species, such as Allium roylei and Allium fistulosum, was a first step towards the improvement of onion cultivars by breeding. Onion lines with resistance to B. squamosa from A. roylei are currently being developed [10] In another relative of onion, A. fistulosum, accessions with resistance to B. squamosa [8, 11, 12], Fusarium oxysporum [13], Phoma terrestris [14, 15] and C. gloeosporioides [9] were identified. Resistance to F. oxysporum was observed in accessions of A. galanthum and A. schoenoprasum [16] These examples clearly show the potential of onion-related species as sources for improvement of onion cultivars
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