Abstract

In the present survey, interspecific somatic protoplast fusion between a dihaploid cultivated potato Solanum L. tuberosum (BF15) and a wild species Solanum vernei (V3) has been performed using the PEG method. Five putative hybrids were first selected. Among them, only two were retained. DNA analysis, using flow cytometry, showed that the first hybrid (VB2) was dihaploid (2n=2x=24 chromosomes), whereas the second (VB1) was hexaploid (2n=6x=72 chromosomes). In the greenhouse, these putative hybrids showed that they were able of raising and producing large tubers but with a modified shape compared to parental ones. Furthermore, they harbored an intermediate leaf morphology compared to their parents. The hybrid nature of these plants was first confirmed according to their esterase and peroxidase isoenzyme patterns. The RAPD analysis of genomic DNA and microsatellite based amplification (I-SSR) showed that both clones VB1 and VB2 are asymmetric somatic hybrids. They seem to have eliminated the major part of V3 parental nucleus but not the totality. The analysis of chloroplast DNA suggests that both hybrid plastomes were the result of a recombination between parental ones.

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