BMC Plant Biology (Jun 2012)

<it>In silico</it> polymorphism analysis for the development of simple sequence repeat and transposon markers and construction of linkage map in cultivated peanut

  • Shirasawa Kenta,
  • Koilkonda Padmalatha,
  • Aoki Koh,
  • Hirakawa Hideki,
  • Tabata Satoshi,
  • Watanabe Manabu,
  • Hasegawa Makoto,
  • Kiyoshima Hiroyuki,
  • Suzuki Shigeru,
  • Kuwata Chikara,
  • Naito Yoshiki,
  • Kuboyama Tsutomu,
  • Nakaya Akihiro,
  • Sasamoto Shigemi,
  • Watanabe Akiko,
  • Kato Midori,
  • Kawashima Kumiko,
  • Kishida Yoshie,
  • Kohara Mitsuyo,
  • Kurabayashi Atsushi,
  • Takahashi Chika,
  • Tsuruoka Hisano,
  • Wada Tsuyuko,
  • Isobe Sachiko

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-12-80
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 80

Abstract

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Abstract Background Peanut (Arachis hypogaea) is an autogamous allotetraploid legume (2n = 4x = 40) that is widely cultivated as a food and oil crop. More than 6,000 DNA markers have been developed in Arachis spp., but high-density linkage maps useful for genetics, genomics, and breeding have not been constructed due to extremely low genetic diversity. Polymorphic marker loci are useful for the construction of such high-density linkage maps. The present study used in silico analysis to develop simple sequence repeat-based and transposon-based markers. Results The use of in silico analysis increased the efficiency of polymorphic marker development by more than 3-fold. In total, 926 (34.2%) of 2,702 markers showed polymorphisms between parental lines of the mapping population. Linkage analysis of the 926 markers along with 253 polymorphic markers selected from 4,449 published markers generated 21 linkage groups covering 2,166.4 cM with 1,114 loci. Based on the map thus produced, 23 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for 15 agronomical traits were detected. Another linkage map with 326 loci was also constructed and revealed a relationship between the genotypes of the FAD2 genes and the ratio of oleic/linoleic acid in peanut seed. Conclusions In silico analysis of polymorphisms increased the efficiency of polymorphic marker development, and contributed to the construction of high-density linkage maps in cultivated peanut. The resultant maps were applicable to QTL analysis. Marker subsets and linkage maps developed in this study should be useful for genetics, genomics, and breeding in Arachis. The data are available at the Kazusa DNA Marker Database (http://marker.kazusa.or.jp).

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