An intraspecific linkage map of the chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) genome based on sequence tagged microsatellite site and resistance gene analog markers

Publication Overview
TitleAn intraspecific linkage map of the chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) genome based on sequence tagged microsatellite site and resistance gene analog markers
AuthorsFlandez-Galvez H, Ford R, Pang E, Taylor P
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameTheoretical and applied genetics
Volume106
Issue8
Year2003
Page(s)1447-1456
CitationFlandez-Galvez H, Ford R, Pang E, Taylor P. An intraspecific linkage map of the chickpea (Cicer arietinum L.) genome based on sequence tagged microsatellite site and resistance gene analog markers. Theoretical and applied genetics. 2003 May; 106(8):1447-1456.

Abstract

An intraspecific linkage map of the chickpea genome based on STMS as anchor markers, was established using an F2 population of chickpea cultivars with contrasting disease reactions to Ascochyta rabiei (Pass.) Lab. At a LOD-score of 2.0 and a maximum recombination distance of 20 cM, 51 out of 54 chickpea-STMS markers (94.4%), three ISSR markers (100%) and 12 RGA markers (57.1%) were mapped into eight linkage groups. The chickpea-derived STMS markers were distributed throughout the genome, while the RGA markers clustered with the ISSR markers on linkage groups LG I, II and III. The intraspecific linkage map spanned 534.5 cM with an average interval of 8.1 cM between markers. Sixteen markers (19.5%) were unlinked, while 11 chickpea-STMS markers (20.4%) deviated significantly (P< 0.05) from the expected Mendelian segregation ratio and segregated in favor of the maternal alleles. However, ten of the distorted chickpea-STMS markers were mapped and clustered mostly on LG VII, suggesting the association of these loci in the preferential transmission of the maternal germ line. Preliminary comparative mapping revealed that chickpea may have evolved from Cicer reticulatum, possibly via inversion of DNA sequences and minor chromosomal translocation. At least three linkage groups that spanned a total of approximately 79.2 cM were conserved in the speciation process.
Features
This publication contains information about 4 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
LM637d-198LM637d-198genetic_marker
M51spM51spgenetic_marker
PTOFENPTOFENgenetic_marker
S2iAS3ib-144S2iAS3ib-144genetic_marker
Featuremaps
This publication contains information about 1 maps:
Map Name
chickpea-ICC12004xLasseter-F2
Properties
Additional details for this publication include:
Property NameValue
Publication Date2003 May
Journal AbbreviationTheor. appl. genet.
Language Abbreng
Publication TypeJournal Article
URLhttp://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00122-003-1199-y
KeywordsCicer arietinum, chickpeas, chromosome mapping, genome, genetic markers, microsatellite repeats, linkage groups, gene segregation, segregation distortion, cultivars, disease resistance, blight, Ascochyta rabiei, plant pathogenic fungi, inheritance (genetics), inter simple sequence repeats