Acta Agriculturae Scandinavica. Section B, Soil and Plant Science (Feb 2017)

Analysis of genetic diversity of soybean germplasm from five different origins using RAPD markers

  • Muhammad Faisal Anwar Malik,
  • Kaleem Tariq,
  • Afsari S. Qureshi,
  • Muhammad Rashid Khan,
  • Muhammad Ashraf,
  • Gul Naz,
  • Asad Ali

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09064710.2016.1236213
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67, no. 2
pp. 148 – 154

Abstract

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The pattern of genetic diversity among 92 genotypes of soybean from 5 different origins/sources (Pakistan, the USA, Asian Vegetable Research Development Centre (AVRDC), Japan and North Korea) was analyzed using randomly amplified polymorphic DNA markers. Out of 20 random primers 6 tested, 10 were polymorphic among genotypes and they yielded 107 markers, with an average of 10.7 markers per primer. The proportion of polymorphic bands within genotypes ranged from 0.47 to 0.71 with an average of 0.59. Pakistani and US genotypes exhibited the highest number of polymorphic bands (95%), while North Korean genotypes revealed the lowest (60%). The mean band frequency of the primers among genotypes was 0.57 with a range of 0.08–0.99. The Shannon’s index and Nei’s genetic diversity index revealed that primer OPF-06 showed maximum genetic diversity among the genotypes. Dendrogram constructed using Unweighted Pair Group Mean Average (UPGMA) method divided the genotypes into 5 main groups consisting of 13 clusters. The results of cluster analysis indicated that the genetic diversity between Pakistani and US or AVRDC genotypes is much larger than that between Pakistani and North Korean or Japanese genotypes. The Pakistani genotypes had distinct bands from plant introductions. Therefore, the Pakistani genotypes may be useful to soybean breeders.

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