The groundnut improvement network for Africa (GINA) germplasm collection: a unique genetic resource for breeding and gene discovery

Archive ouverte

Conde, Soukeye | Rami, Jean-François | Okello, David, K | Sambou, Aissatou | Muitia, Amade | Oteng-Frimpong, Richard | Makweti, Lutangu | Sako, Dramane | Faye, Issa | Chintu, Justus | Coulibaly, Adama, M | Miningou, Amos | Asibuo, James, Y | Konate, Moumouni | Banla, Essohouna, M | Seye, Maguette | Djiboune, Yvette, R | Tossim, Hodo-Abalo | Sylla, Samba, N | Hoisington, David | Clevenger, Josh | Chu, Ye | Tallury, Shyam | Ozias-Akins, Peggy | Fonceka, Daniel

Edité par CCSD ; Genetics Society of America -

International audience. Cultivated peanut or groundnut (Arachis hypogaea L.) is a grain legume grown in many developing countries by smallholder farmers for food, feed, and/or income. The speciation of the cultivated species, that involved polyploidization followed by domestication, greatly reduced its variability at the DNA level. Mobilizing peanut diversity is a prerequisite for any breeding program for overcoming the main constraints that plague production and for increasing yield in farmer fields. In this study, the Groundnut Improvement Network for Africa assembled a collection of 1,049 peanut breeding lines, varieties, and landraces from 9 countries in Africa. The collection was genotyped with the Axiom_Arachis2 48K SNP array and 8,229 polymorphic single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers were used to analyze the genetic structure of this collection and quantify the level of genetic diversity in each breeding program. A supervised model was developed using dapc to unambiguously assign 542, 35, and 172 genotypes to the Spanish, Valencia, and Virginia market types, respectively. Distance-based clustering of the collection showed a clear grouping structure according to subspecies and market types, with 73% of the genotypes classified as fastigiata and 27% as hypogaea subspecies. Using STRUCTURE, the global structuration was confirmed and showed that, at a minimum membership of 0.8, 76% of the varieties that were not assigned by dapc were actually admixed. This was particularly the case of most of the genotype of the Valencia subgroup that exhibited admixed genetic heritage. The results also showed that the geographic origin (i.e. East, Southern, and West Africa) did not strongly explain the genetic structure. The gene diversity managed by each breeding program, measured by the expected heterozygosity, ranged from 0.25 to 0.39, with the Niger breeding program having the lowest diversity mainly because only lines that belong to the fastigiata subspecies are used in this program. Finally, we developed a core collection composed of 300 accessions based on breeding traits and genetic diversity. This collection, which is composed of 205 genotypes of fastigiata subspecies (158 Spanish and 47 Valencia) and 95 genotypes of hypogaea subspecies (all Virginia), improves the genetic diversity of each individual breeding program and is, therefore, a unique resource for allele mining and breeding.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

An Overview of Mapping Quantitative Trait Loci in Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.)

Archive ouverte | Kassie, Fentanesh, C. | CCSD

International audience. Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) mapping has been thoroughly used in peanut genetics and breeding in spite of the narrow genetic diversity and the segmental tetraploid nature of the cultivated s...

Fine-Mapping of a Wild Genomic Region Involved in Pod and Seed Size Reduction on Chromosome A07 in Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.)

Archive ouverte | Alyr, Mounirou Hachim | CCSD

International audience. Fruit and seed size are important yield component traits that have been selected during crop domestication. In previous studies, Advanced Backcross Quantitative Trait Loci (AB-QTL) and Chromo...

Assessment of 16 Peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) CSSLs Derived from an Interspecific Cross for Yield and Yield Component Traits: QTL Validation

Archive ouverte | Tossim, Hodo-Abalo | CCSD

International audience. Cultivated peanut is an allotetraploid (2n = 4× = 40) with narrow genetic diversity. In previous studies, we developed an advanced backcross quantitative trait loci (AB-QTL) population from t...

Chargement des enrichissements...