Cargando…

Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons

To uncover population structure, phylogenetic relationship, and diversity in melons along the famous Silk Road, a seed size measurement and a phylogenetic analysis using five chloroplast genome markers, 17 RAPD markers and 11 SSR markers were conducted for 87 Kazakh melon accessions with reference a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tanaka, Katsunori, Sugiyama, Mitsuhiro, Shigita, Gentaro, Murakami, Ryoma, Duong, Thanh-Thuy, Aierken, Yasheng, Artemyeva, Anna M, Mamypbelov, Zharas, Ishikawa, Ryuji, Nishida, Hidetaka, Kato, Kenji
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Japanese Society of Breeding 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10316308/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37404344
http://dx.doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.22030
_version_ 1785067682408693760
author Tanaka, Katsunori
Sugiyama, Mitsuhiro
Shigita, Gentaro
Murakami, Ryoma
Duong, Thanh-Thuy
Aierken, Yasheng
Artemyeva, Anna M
Mamypbelov, Zharas
Ishikawa, Ryuji
Nishida, Hidetaka
Kato, Kenji
author_facet Tanaka, Katsunori
Sugiyama, Mitsuhiro
Shigita, Gentaro
Murakami, Ryoma
Duong, Thanh-Thuy
Aierken, Yasheng
Artemyeva, Anna M
Mamypbelov, Zharas
Ishikawa, Ryuji
Nishida, Hidetaka
Kato, Kenji
author_sort Tanaka, Katsunori
collection PubMed
description To uncover population structure, phylogenetic relationship, and diversity in melons along the famous Silk Road, a seed size measurement and a phylogenetic analysis using five chloroplast genome markers, 17 RAPD markers and 11 SSR markers were conducted for 87 Kazakh melon accessions with reference accessions. Kazakh melon accessions had large seed with exception of two accessions of weedy melon, Group Agrestis, and consisted of three cytoplasm types, of which Ib-1/-2 and Ib-3 were dominant in Kazakhstan and nearby areas such as northwestern China, Central Asia and Russia. Molecular phylogeny showed that two unique genetic groups, (ST)Ia-2 with Ib-1/-2 cytoplasm and (ST)Ia-1 with Ib-3 cytoplasm, and one admixed group, (ST)I(AD) combined with (ST)Ia and (ST)Ib, were prevalent across all Kazakh melon groups. (ST)I(AD) melons that phylogenetically overlapped with (ST)Ia-1 and (ST)Ia-2 melons were frequent in the eastern Silk Road region, including Kazakhstan. Evidently, a small population contributed to melon development and variation in the eastern Silk Road. Conscious preservation of fruit traits specific to Kazakh melon groups is thought to play a role in the conservation of Kazakh melon genetic variation during melon production, where hybrid progenies were generated through open pollination.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10316308
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher Japanese Society of Breeding
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-103163082023-07-04 Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons Tanaka, Katsunori Sugiyama, Mitsuhiro Shigita, Gentaro Murakami, Ryoma Duong, Thanh-Thuy Aierken, Yasheng Artemyeva, Anna M Mamypbelov, Zharas Ishikawa, Ryuji Nishida, Hidetaka Kato, Kenji Breed Sci Research Paper To uncover population structure, phylogenetic relationship, and diversity in melons along the famous Silk Road, a seed size measurement and a phylogenetic analysis using five chloroplast genome markers, 17 RAPD markers and 11 SSR markers were conducted for 87 Kazakh melon accessions with reference accessions. Kazakh melon accessions had large seed with exception of two accessions of weedy melon, Group Agrestis, and consisted of three cytoplasm types, of which Ib-1/-2 and Ib-3 were dominant in Kazakhstan and nearby areas such as northwestern China, Central Asia and Russia. Molecular phylogeny showed that two unique genetic groups, (ST)Ia-2 with Ib-1/-2 cytoplasm and (ST)Ia-1 with Ib-3 cytoplasm, and one admixed group, (ST)I(AD) combined with (ST)Ia and (ST)Ib, were prevalent across all Kazakh melon groups. (ST)I(AD) melons that phylogenetically overlapped with (ST)Ia-1 and (ST)Ia-2 melons were frequent in the eastern Silk Road region, including Kazakhstan. Evidently, a small population contributed to melon development and variation in the eastern Silk Road. Conscious preservation of fruit traits specific to Kazakh melon groups is thought to play a role in the conservation of Kazakh melon genetic variation during melon production, where hybrid progenies were generated through open pollination. Japanese Society of Breeding 2023-04 2023-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10316308/ /pubmed/37404344 http://dx.doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.22030 Text en Copyright © 2023 by JAPANESE SOCIETY OF BREEDING https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (BY) License (CC-BY 4.0: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Paper
Tanaka, Katsunori
Sugiyama, Mitsuhiro
Shigita, Gentaro
Murakami, Ryoma
Duong, Thanh-Thuy
Aierken, Yasheng
Artemyeva, Anna M
Mamypbelov, Zharas
Ishikawa, Ryuji
Nishida, Hidetaka
Kato, Kenji
Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons
title Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons
title_full Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons
title_fullStr Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons
title_full_unstemmed Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons
title_short Melon diversity on the Silk Road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in Kazakhstan melons
title_sort melon diversity on the silk road by molecular phylogenetic analysis in kazakhstan melons
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10316308/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37404344
http://dx.doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.22030
work_keys_str_mv AT tanakakatsunori melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT sugiyamamitsuhiro melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT shigitagentaro melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT murakamiryoma melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT duongthanhthuy melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT aierkenyasheng melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT artemyevaannam melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT mamypbelovzharas melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT ishikawaryuji melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT nishidahidetaka melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons
AT katokenji melondiversityonthesilkroadbymolecularphylogeneticanalysisinkazakhstanmelons