1. Genetic diversity, population structure and association analysis in cut chrysanthemum ( Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.).
- Author
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Li, Pirui, Zhang, Fei, Chen, Sumei, Jiang, Jiafu, Wang, Haibin, Su, Jiangshuo, Fang, Weimin, Guan, Zhiyong, and Chen, Fadi
- Subjects
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CHRYSANTHEMUM morifolium , *HUMAN ecology , *DNA , *BIOMARKERS , *BAYESIAN analysis , *STATISTICAL decision making - Abstract
Characterizing the genetic diversity present in a working set of plant germplasm can contribute to its effective management and genetic improvement. The cut flower chrysanthemum ( Chrysanthemum morifolium Ramat.) is an economically important ornamental species. With the repeated germplasm exchange and intensive breeding activities, it remains a major task in genetic research. The purpose of the present study was to characterize the genetic diversity and the population structure of a worldwide collection of 159 varieties, and to apply an association mapping approach to identify DNA-based markers linked to five plant architecture traits and six inflorescence traits. The genotyping demonstrated that there was no lack of genetic diversity in the collection and that pair-wise kinship values were relatively low. The clustering based on a Bayesian model of population structure did not reflect known variation in either provenance or inflorescence type. A principal coordinate analysis was, however, able to discriminate most of the varieties according to both of these criteria. About 1 in 100 marker pairs exhibited a degree of linkage disequilibrium. The association analysis identified a number of markers putatively linked to one or more of the traits. Some of these associations were robust over two seasons. The findings provide an in-depth understanding of genetic diversity and population structure present in cut flower chrysanthemum varieties, and an insight into the genetic control of plant architecture and inflorescence-related traits. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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