Linkage Maps of Lowland and Upland Tetraploid Switchgrass Ecotypes |
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Authors: | Desalegn Serba Limin Wu Guillaume Daverdin Bochra A. Bahri Xuewen Wang Andrzej Kilian Joseph H. Bouton E. Charles Brummer Malay C. Saha Katrien M. Devos |
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Affiliation: | 1. Forage Improvement Division, The Samuel Roberts Noble Foundation, Ardmore, OK, 73401, USA 2. Institute of Plant Breeding, Genetics and Genomics (Department of Crop and Soil Sciences), 3111 Miller Plant Sciences, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA 3. Department of Plant Biology, University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA 6. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Hangzhou Normal University, Hangzhou, 310036, China 4. Department of Plant Protection and Postharvest Diseases, National Agronomical Institute of Tunis, Tunis, 1082, Tunisia 7. China Tobacco Gene Research Center, No.2 Fengyang Street, High-Tech Zone, Zhengzhou, 450001, China 5. Diversity Arrays Technology Pty Ltd, Yarralumla, ACT, 2600, Australia
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Abstract: | Switchgrass (Panicum virgatum L.) is a native perennial warm season (C4) grass that has been identified as a promising species for bioenergy research and production. Consequently, biomass yield and feedstock quality improvements are high priorities for switchgrass research. The objective of this study was to develop a switchgrass genetic linkage map using a full-sib pseudo-testcross mapping population derived from a cross between two heterozygous genotypes selected from the lowland cultivar ‘Alamo’ (AP13) and the upland cultivar ‘Summer’ (VS16). The female parent (AP13) map consists of 515 loci in 18 linkage groups (LGs) and spans 1,733 cM. The male parent (VS16) map arranges 363 loci in 17 LGs and spans 1,508 cM. No obvious cause for the lack of one LG in VS16 could be identified. Comparative analyses between the AP13 and VS16 maps showed that the two major ecotypic classes of switchgrass have highly colinear maps with similar recombination rates, suggesting that chromosomal exchange between the two ecotypes should be able to occur freely. The AP13 and VS16 maps are also highly similar with respect to marker orders and recombination levels to previously published switchgrass maps. The genetic maps will be used to identify quantitative trait loci associated with biomass and quality traits. The AP13 genotype was used for the whole genome-sequencing project and the map will thus also provide a tool for the anchoring of the switchgrass genome assembly. |
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