Development of ESTs from chickpea roots and their use in diversity analysis of the Cicer genus

Publication Overview
TitleDevelopment of ESTs from chickpea roots and their use in diversity analysis of the Cicer genus
AuthorsBuhariwalla HK, Jayashree B, Eshwar K, Crouch JH
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameBMC plant biology
Volume5
Year2005
Page(s)16
CitationBuhariwalla HK, Jayashree B, Eshwar K, Crouch JH. Development of ESTs from chickpea roots and their use in diversity analysis of the Cicer genus. BMC plant biology. 2005; 5:16.

Abstract

BACKGROUND
Chickpea is a major crop in many drier regions of the world where it is an important protein-rich food and an increasingly valuable traded commodity. The wild annual Cicer species are known to possess unique sources of resistance to pests and diseases, and tolerance to environmental stresses. However, there has been limited utilization of these wild species by chickpea breeding programs due to interspecific crossing barriers and deleterious linkage drag. Molecular genetic diversity analysis may help predict which accessions are most likely to produce fertile progeny when crossed with chickpea cultivars. While, trait-markers may provide an effective tool for breaking linkage drag. Although SSR markers are the assay of choice for marker-assisted selection of specific traits in conventional breeding populations, they may not provide reliable estimates of interspecific diversity, and may lose selective power in backcross programs based on interspecific introgressions. Thus, we have pursued the development of gene-based markers to resolve these problems and to provide candidate gene markers for QTL mapping of important agronomic traits.

RESULTS
An EST library was constructed after subtractive suppressive hybridization (SSH) of root tissue from two very closely related chickpea genotypes (Cicer arietinum). A total of 106 EST-based markers were designed from 477 sequences with functional annotations and these were tested on C. arietinum. Forty-four EST markers were polymorphic when screened across nine Cicer species (including the cultigen). Parsimony and PCoA analysis of the resultant EST-marker dataset indicated that most accessions cluster in accordance with the previously defined classification of primary (C. arietinum, C. echinospermum and C. reticulatum), secondary (C. pinnatifidum, C. bijugum and C. judaicum), and tertiary (C. yamashitae, C. chrossanicum and C. cuneatum) gene-pools. A large proportion of EST alleles (45%) were only present in one or two of the accessions tested whilst the others were represented in up to twelve of the accessions tested.

CONCLUSION
Gene-based markers have proven to be effective tools for diversity analysis in Cicer and EST diversity analysis may be useful in identifying promising candidates for interspecific hybridization programs. The EST markers generated in this study have detected high levels of polymorphism amongst both common and rare alleles. This suggests that they would be useful for allele-mining of germplasm collections for identification of candidate accessions in the search for new sources of resistance to pests / diseases, and tolerance to abiotic stresses.

Features
This publication contains information about 44 features:
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AGLC52AGLC52genetic_marker
AGLC53AGLC53genetic_marker
AGLC55AGLC55genetic_marker
AGLC57AGLC57genetic_marker
AGLC60AGLC60genetic_marker
AGLC61AGLC61genetic_marker
AGLC64AGLC64genetic_marker
AGLC66AGLC66genetic_marker
AGLC67AGLC67genetic_marker

Pages

Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication TypeJournal Article
Journal CountryEngland
Publication ModelElectronic
ISSN1471-2229
eISSN1471-2229
Publication Date2005
Journal AbbreviationBMC Plant Biol.
LanguageEnglish
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov't