文献类型: 外文期刊
作者: Liao Yi 1 ; Sun Bao-juan 2 ; Sun Guang-wen 1 ; Liu Hou-cheng 1 ; Li Zhi-liang 2 ; Li Zhen-xing 2 ; Wang Guo-ping 1 ; Chen 1 ;
作者机构: 1.S China Agr Univ, Coll Hort, Guangzhou 510642, Guangdong, Peoples R China
2.Guangdong Acad Agr Sci, Vegetable Res Inst, Guangzhou 510640, Guangdong, Peoples R China
关键词: eggplant;peel color;bulked line analysis;AFLP marker;SCAR marker
期刊名称:AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES IN CHINA ( 影响因子:0.82; 五年影响因子:0.997 )
ISSN: 1671-2927
年卷期: 2009 年 8 卷 12 期
页码:
收录情况: SCI
摘要: Peel color is an important breeding objective for eggplant. Dark purple and purplish red are the most common colors in commercial eggplant cultivars. A co-dominant amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) marker which was associated with the peel color (each in coupling phase to dark purple and purplish red) was found in studying the genetic diversity in 58 eggplant accessions (contained cultivars and wild relatives). The maker bands were sequenced and converted to SCAR marker, this polymorphism in sequence was from an inserted/deleted (indels) mutation. And DNA from 136 eggplant materials (inbred lines, F,, and wild relatives) were amplified with the designed SCAR primers as template, high correlation between the SCAR marker and peel color (dark purple and purplish red) was found. Then, bulked line analysis (BLA) combined with AFLP was further used to identify polymorphic fragments, and another six AFLP markers were tested and verified to be associated with peel color, which demonstrated that BLA was an useful method for identifying molecular markers of interested traits. In conclusion, these markers will facilitate the MAS (maker-assisted selection) of eggplant breeding for peel color.
- 相关文献
作者其他论文 更多>>
-
Silicon impacts on soil microflora under Ralstonia Solanacearum inoculation
作者:Lin Wei-peng;Jiang Ni-hao;Fan Xue-ying;Gao Yang;Cai Kun-zheng;Lin Wei-peng;Lin Wei-peng;Jiang Ni-hao;Fan Xue-ying;Gao Yang;Cai Kun-zheng;Peng Li;Wang Guo-ping
关键词:bacterial wilt; deep pyrosequencing; Ralstonia solanacearum; silicon; soil microbial community