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Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers

Tea cultivars have been bred by individual selection of landraces and by crossbreeding, but the validation of the parentage is limited. In this study, we performed parentage analysis of 79 tea cultivars in Japan based on SSR markers to confirm or identify the parent-offspring relationships among the...

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Autores principales: Kubo, Nakao, Matsuda, Tomohiro, Yanagida, Chisaki, Hotta, Yuna, Mimura, Yutaka, Kanda, Maho
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Japanese Society of Breeding 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8784347/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35087323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.20156
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author Kubo, Nakao
Matsuda, Tomohiro
Yanagida, Chisaki
Hotta, Yuna
Mimura, Yutaka
Kanda, Maho
author_facet Kubo, Nakao
Matsuda, Tomohiro
Yanagida, Chisaki
Hotta, Yuna
Mimura, Yutaka
Kanda, Maho
author_sort Kubo, Nakao
collection PubMed
description Tea cultivars have been bred by individual selection of landraces and by crossbreeding, but the validation of the parentage is limited. In this study, we performed parentage analysis of 79 tea cultivars in Japan based on SSR markers to confirm or identify the parent-offspring relationships among them. The effectiveness of nine SSR markers for parentage analysis was validated by comparing them to the existing cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence markers. The former markers were detectable more alleles than the latter. Simulation of parentage analysis of the tea cultivars predicted biparental origins for 12 cultivars (‘Houshun’, ‘Mie ryokuhou no. 1’, ‘Surugawase’, ‘Tenmyo’, ‘Yamanoibuki’, ‘Harumidori’, ‘Koushun’, ‘Minekaori’, ‘Okumusashi’, ‘Saemidori’, ‘Sofu’, and ‘Toyoka’), in the first five of which candidate parents of yet-to-be-defined pedigree were newly identified. Comparisons of a total of 41 SSR genotypes confirmed the newly-identified parentages of ‘Asahi’ for ‘Tenmyo’, ‘Rokurou’ for ‘Houshun’, ‘Surugawase’, and ‘Yamanoibuki’, and ‘Yamatomidori’ for ‘Mie ryokuhou no. 1’. The maternity of seven cultivars out of the 12 was also confirmed with chloroplast DNA sequences. Uniparental origins were confirmed for 25 cultivars. This parentage analysis has improved our knowledge of tea pedigrees and will aid in the development of new cultivars.
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spelling pubmed-87843472022-01-26 Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers Kubo, Nakao Matsuda, Tomohiro Yanagida, Chisaki Hotta, Yuna Mimura, Yutaka Kanda, Maho Breed Sci Note Tea cultivars have been bred by individual selection of landraces and by crossbreeding, but the validation of the parentage is limited. In this study, we performed parentage analysis of 79 tea cultivars in Japan based on SSR markers to confirm or identify the parent-offspring relationships among them. The effectiveness of nine SSR markers for parentage analysis was validated by comparing them to the existing cleaved amplified polymorphic sequence markers. The former markers were detectable more alleles than the latter. Simulation of parentage analysis of the tea cultivars predicted biparental origins for 12 cultivars (‘Houshun’, ‘Mie ryokuhou no. 1’, ‘Surugawase’, ‘Tenmyo’, ‘Yamanoibuki’, ‘Harumidori’, ‘Koushun’, ‘Minekaori’, ‘Okumusashi’, ‘Saemidori’, ‘Sofu’, and ‘Toyoka’), in the first five of which candidate parents of yet-to-be-defined pedigree were newly identified. Comparisons of a total of 41 SSR genotypes confirmed the newly-identified parentages of ‘Asahi’ for ‘Tenmyo’, ‘Rokurou’ for ‘Houshun’, ‘Surugawase’, and ‘Yamanoibuki’, and ‘Yamatomidori’ for ‘Mie ryokuhou no. 1’. The maternity of seven cultivars out of the 12 was also confirmed with chloroplast DNA sequences. Uniparental origins were confirmed for 25 cultivars. This parentage analysis has improved our knowledge of tea pedigrees and will aid in the development of new cultivars. Japanese Society of Breeding 2021-12 2021-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8784347/ /pubmed/35087323 http://dx.doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.20156 Text en Copyright © 2021 by JAPANESE SOCIETY OF BREEDING https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Note
Kubo, Nakao
Matsuda, Tomohiro
Yanagida, Chisaki
Hotta, Yuna
Mimura, Yutaka
Kanda, Maho
Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
title Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
title_full Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
title_fullStr Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
title_full_unstemmed Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
title_short Parentage analysis of tea cultivars in Japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
title_sort parentage analysis of tea cultivars in japan based on simple sequence repeat markers
topic Note
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8784347/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35087323
http://dx.doi.org/10.1270/jsbbs.20156
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