Abstract

BackgroundSweet sorghum is an emerging biofuel candidate crop with multiple benefits as a source of biomass energy. Increase of biomass and sugar productivity and quality is a central goal in its improvement. Target region amplified polymorphism (TRAP) is a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based functional marker system that can detect genetic diversity in the functional region of target genes. Thirty sweet sorghum genotypes were used to study the potential of 24 pairs of TRAP marker system in assessing genetic diversity with regard to three lignin and three sucrose biosynthesis genes. ResultsA total of 1638 bands were produced out of which 1161 (70.88%) were polymorphic at least at one locus. The average polymorphic information content (PIC), resolving power (RP), marker index (MI), Shannon’s diversity index (H), and gene diversity values were 0.32, 8.86, 1.74, 3.25, and 0.329, respectively. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed a highly significant genetic variation both within and among accessions studied (P = 0.01). However, the variation within the population was higher than among the populations (accessions). Bootstrap analysis showed that the number of loci amplified using this marker system is sufficient to estimate the available genetic diversity. The thirty genotypes were categorized into five clusters using a similarity matrix at 0.72 coefficient of similarity. The genotypes were also grouped mostly according to their geographic origin where the Ethiopian and Egyptian genotypes tend to fall in specific clusters. Moreover, the genotypes reflected the same pattern of distribution when ordinated using principal coordinate analysis. ConclusionsIn conclusion, TRAP marker can be used as a powerful tool to study genetic diversity in sweet sorghum.

Highlights

  • Sweet sorghum is an emerging biofuel candidate crop with multiple benefits as a source of biomass energy

  • DNA extraction Genomic DNA was extracted from fresh young leaves of 15 days old sweet sorghum seedlings digested in liquid nitrogen using Thermo Scientific GeneJET Plant Genomic Extraction mini kit according to the manufacturers protocol

  • A total of 1638 bands were amplified from the 30 sweet sorghum genotypes using 24-marker combinations

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Summary

Introduction

Sweet sorghum is an emerging biofuel candidate crop with multiple benefits as a source of biomass energy. Target region amplified polymorphism (TRAP) is a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) based functional marker system that can detect genetic diversity in the functional region of target genes. Thirty sweet sorghum genotypes were used to study the potential of 24 pairs of TRAP marker system in assessing genetic diversity with regard to three lignin and three sucrose biosynthesis genes. The genus Sorghum encompasses three species: Sorghum bicolor, Sorghum propinquum, and Sorghum halepense. The species S. bicolor includes three subspecies: S. bicolor subsp. Sweet sorghum is a variety of Global energy consumption is predicted to rise nearly by 50% between 2018 and 2050 according to the US energy administration (www.eia.gov/ieo). Depletion of fossil resources, global warming due to the

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