Journal of Food, Agriculture and Environment




Vol 8, Issue 3&4,2010
Online ISSN: 1459-0263
Print ISSN: 1459-0255


Assessment of genetic variation among safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) accessions using agro-morphological traits and molecular markers


Author(s):

Seyed Afshin Safavi 1*, Seyyed Saeid Pourdad 2, Mohmmad Taeb 1, Mahmoud Khosroshahli 1

Recieved Date: 2010-07-20, Accepted Date: 2010-11-07

Abstract:

Genetic variation in twenty safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) accessions was characterized by means of agro-morphological traits, random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) and inter-simple sequence repeats (ISSR) markers in order to evaluate. A field trial was conducted to evaluate 17 agro-morphological traits. To study RAPD and ISSR, initially, 53 primers were screened, of which 22 produced reproducible amplification products. Using 13 selected RAPD primers 74 markers were generated of which 60 were polymorphic (81.08%). The number of amplified bands varied from three to nine, with size ranged from 250 to 2,500 bps. The nine selected ISSR primers produced 50 bands across 20 genotypes, of which 48 were polymorphic (96.00%). The number of amplified fragments with ISSR primers ranged from three to eight and varied in size from 250 to 1,450 bps. By all primers (RAPD + ISSR), a total of 124 bands were detected, of which 108 bands (87%) were polymorphic with an average of 5.63 bands per primer. High percentage of polymorphism (87%) observed with combined markers data revealed high level of genetic variation existing among the accessions. Genetic relationship estimated using similarity coefficients (Jaccard’s) values between different pair of accessions varied from 0.26 to 0.84 in RAPD, 0.28 to 0.86 in ISSR and 0.29 to 0.78 with combined markers suggested a variation (dissimilarity) ranging from 16 to 74%, 14 to 72% and 22 to 71% respectively. ISSR markers were relatively more efficient than the RAPD assay. The Mantel matrix correspondence test between two Jaccard’s similarity matrices, showing statistically significant correlation between ISSR- and RAPD-based similarities. Cluster analysis based on combined data of both molecular markers (ISSR+RAPD) separated the accessions into five groups and based on morphological traits, RAPD and ISSR data accessions formed in four distinct groups. Classification schemes generated by morphologic and molecular markers data did not coincide. The grouping of accessions was supported by principal coordinate analyses (PCoA). It is suggested that ISSR and RAPD are effective markers system for detecting variation among safflower genotypes.

Keywords:

Agro-morphological traits, Carthamus tinctorius L., genetic variation, ISSR, molecular markers, RAPD, safflower


Journal: Journal of Food, Agriculture and Environment
Year: 2010
Volume: 8
Issue: 3&4
Category: Agriculture
Pages: 616-625


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