Published January 1, 2018 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Characterization of genetic diversity in Turkish common bean gene pool using phenotypic and whole-genome DArTseq-generated silicoDArT marker information

  • 1. Abant Izzet Baysal Univ, Fac Agr & Nat Sci, Dept Field Crops, Bolu, Turkey
  • 2. Consiglio Ric Agr & Anal Econ Agr, Ctr Ric Cerealicoltura & Colture Ind, Bologna, Italy
  • 3. Chonnam Natl Univ, Dept Biotechnol, Chungnam, South Korea
  • 4. Univ Cumhuriyet, Vocat Sch Sivas, Organ Agr Program, Sivas, Turkey
  • 5. Eastern Mediterranean Agr Res Inst, Adana, Turkey
  • 6. South China Agr Univ, State Key Lab Conservat & Utilizat Subtrop Agrobi, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China
  • 7. Univ Cukurova, Fac Agr, Dept Field Crops, Adana, Turkey
  • 8. Ataturk Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Hort, Erzurum, Turkey

Description

Turkey presents a great diversity of common bean landraces in farmers' fields. We collected 183 common bean accessions from 19 different Turkish geographic regions and 5 scarlet runner bean accessions to investigate their genetic diversity and population structure using phenotypic information (growth habit, and seed weight, flower color, bracteole shape and size, pod shape and leaf shape and color), geographic provenance and 12,557 silicoDArT markers. A total of 24.14% markers were found novel. For the entire population (188 accessions), the expected heterozygosity was 0.078 and overall gene diversity, Fst and Fis were 0.14, 0.55 and 1, respectively. Using marker information, model-based structure, principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) and unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic means (UPGMA) algorithms clustered the 188 accessions into two main populations A (predominant) and B, and 5 unclassified genotypes, representing 3 meaningful heterotic groups for breeding purposes. Phenotypic information clearly distinguished these populations; population A and B, respectively, were bigger (>40g/100 seeds) and smaller (<40g/100 seeds) seed-sized. The unclassified population was pure and only contained climbing genotypes with 100 seed weight 2-3 times greater than populations A and B. Clustering was mainly based on A: seed weight, B: growth habit, C: geographical provinces and D: flower color. Mean kinship was generally low, but population B was more diverse than population A. Overall, a useful level of gene and genotypic diversity was observed in this work and can be used by the scientific community in breeding efforts to develop superior common bean strains.

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