The Plant Genome (Jul 2011)

Marker-Assisted Selection to Pyramid Nematode Resistance and the High Oleic Trait in Peanut

  • Y. Chu,
  • C. L. Wu,
  • C. C. Holbrook,
  • B. L. Tillman,
  • G. Person,
  • P. Ozias-Akins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3835/plantgenome2011.01.0001
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 2
pp. 110 – 117

Abstract

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The dynamic challenges of peanut ( L.) farming demand a quick response from breeders to develop new cultivars, a process that can be aided by the application of molecular markers. With the goal to pyramid nematode resistance and the trait for high oleic:linoleic acid (high O:L) ratio in seeds, nematode-resistant cultivar Tifguard was used as the recurrent female parent and high O:L cultivars Georgia-02C and Florida-07 were used as donor parents for the high O:L trait. ‘Tifguard High O/L’ was generated through three rounds of accelerated backcrossing using BCF progenies selected with molecular markers for these two traits as the pollen donors. Selfed BCF plants yielded marker-homozygous individuals identified as Tifguard High O/L, compressing the hybridization and selection phases of the cultivar development process to less than 3 yr. The accuracy of marker-assisted selection (MAS) was confirmed by phenotyping a subset of F populations from both parental combinations. Once additional molecular markers linked with traits of interest are designed to be compatible with high-throughput screening platforms, MAS will be more widely integrated into peanut breeding programs.