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'Ogura'-based 'CMS' lines with different nuclear backgrounds of cabbage revealed substantial diversity at morphological and molecular levels.

Authors :
Parkash, Chander
Kumar, Sandeep
Singh, Rajender
Kumar, Ajay
Kumar, Satish
Dey, Shyam
Bhatia, Reeta
Kumar, Raj
Source :
3 Biotech. 12/22/2017, Vol. 8 Issue 1, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

A comprehensive study on characterization and genetic diversity analysis was carried out in 16 'Ogura'-based 'CMS' lines of cabbage using 14 agro-morphological traits and 29 SSR markers. Agro-morphological characterization depicted considerable variations for different horticultural traits studied. The genotype, ZHA-2, performed better for most of the economically important quantitative traits. Further, gross head weight (0.76), head length (0.60) and head width (0.83) revealed significant positive correlation with net head weight. Dendrogram based on 10 quantitative traits exhibited considerable diversity among different CMS lines and principle component analysis (PCA) indicated that net and gross head weight, and head length and width are the main components of divergence between 16 CMS lines of cabbage. In molecular study, a total of 58 alleles were amplified by 29 SSR primers, averaging to 2.0 alleles in each locus. High mean values of Shannon's Information index (0.62), expected (0.45) and observed (0.32) heterozygosity and polymorphic information content (0.35) depicted substantial polymorphism. Dendrogram based on Jaccard's similarity coefficient constructed two major groups and eight sub-groups, which revealed substantial diversity among different CMS lines. In overall, based on agro-morphological and molecular studies genotype RRMA, ZHA-2 and RCA were found most divergent. Hence, they have immense potential in future breeding programs for the high-yielding hybrid development in cabbage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2190572X
Volume :
8
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
3 Biotech
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126969922
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13205-017-1047-4