Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn

Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers were used to characterize a part of a sea buckthorn gene bank collected for plant breeding purposes. Molecular markers were generated in 55 cultivars and accessions, representing five subspecies of Hippophae rhamnoides L. and intraspecific hybrids betw...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: G.I. BARTISH, N. JEPPSSON, I.V. BARTISH
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland 2008-12-01
Series:Agricultural and Food Science
Online Access:https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5669
id doaj-298d50b38228480c8523d41c74c603c8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-298d50b38228480c8523d41c74c603c82020-11-24T21:23:19ZengScientific Agricultural Society of FinlandAgricultural and Food Science1459-60671795-18952008-12-0194 Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthornG.I. BARTISHN. JEPPSSONI.V. BARTISHRandom amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers were used to characterize a part of a sea buckthorn gene bank collected for plant breeding purposes. Molecular markers were generated in 55 cultivars and accessions, representing five subspecies of Hippophae rhamnoides L. and intraspecific hybrids between different subspecies. Sixty-three markers were used to generate a Dice's similarity coefficient matrix of pairwise comparisons between individual RAPD profiles. Cluster (UPGMA) and principal co-ordinate analyses, based on this matrix, revealed clustering of plants into groups which generally correspond to their taxonomic classification or geographic origin. The analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) was found useful for estimating components of genetic variation between and within taxonomic and geographic groups of accessions and cultivars. Whereas both alternatives for grouping the material (taxonomic or geographic origin) resulted in significant between-group variation, the major part of molecular variance (approximately 75%) was still attributed to variation within groups. We conclude that the RAPD analysis is useful for clarification of taxonomic and geographic origin of accessions and cultivars of sea buckthorn.https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5669
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author G.I. BARTISH
N. JEPPSSON
I.V. BARTISH
spellingShingle G.I. BARTISH
N. JEPPSSON
I.V. BARTISH
Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
Agricultural and Food Science
author_facet G.I. BARTISH
N. JEPPSSON
I.V. BARTISH
author_sort G.I. BARTISH
title Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
title_short Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
title_full Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
title_fullStr Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of genetic diversity using RAPD analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
title_sort assessment of genetic diversity using rapd analysis in a germplasm collection of sea buckthorn
publisher Scientific Agricultural Society of Finland
series Agricultural and Food Science
issn 1459-6067
1795-1895
publishDate 2008-12-01
description Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers were used to characterize a part of a sea buckthorn gene bank collected for plant breeding purposes. Molecular markers were generated in 55 cultivars and accessions, representing five subspecies of Hippophae rhamnoides L. and intraspecific hybrids between different subspecies. Sixty-three markers were used to generate a Dice's similarity coefficient matrix of pairwise comparisons between individual RAPD profiles. Cluster (UPGMA) and principal co-ordinate analyses, based on this matrix, revealed clustering of plants into groups which generally correspond to their taxonomic classification or geographic origin. The analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) was found useful for estimating components of genetic variation between and within taxonomic and geographic groups of accessions and cultivars. Whereas both alternatives for grouping the material (taxonomic or geographic origin) resulted in significant between-group variation, the major part of molecular variance (approximately 75%) was still attributed to variation within groups. We conclude that the RAPD analysis is useful for clarification of taxonomic and geographic origin of accessions and cultivars of sea buckthorn.
url https://journal.fi/afs/article/view/5669
work_keys_str_mv AT gibartish assessmentofgeneticdiversityusingrapdanalysisinagermplasmcollectionofseabuckthorn
AT njeppsson assessmentofgeneticdiversityusingrapdanalysisinagermplasmcollectionofseabuckthorn
AT ivbartish assessmentofgeneticdiversityusingrapdanalysisinagermplasmcollectionofseabuckthorn
_version_ 1725992166534152192