Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://223.31.159.10:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/484
Title: Genome-wide high-throughput SNP discovery and genotyping for understanding natural (functional) allelic diversity and domestication patterns in wild chickpea
Authors: Bajaj, Deepak
Das, Shouvik
Badoni, Saurabh
Kumar, Vinod
Singh, Mohar
Bansal, Kailash C.
Tyagi, Akhilesh K.
Parida, Swarup K.
Keywords: Natural variation in plants
Plant domestication
Issue Date: 2015
Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Citation: Scientific Reports, 5: 12468
Abstract: We identified 82489 high-quality genome-wide SNPs from 93 wild and cultivated Cicer accessions through integrated reference genome- and de novo-based GBS assays. High intra- and inter-specific polymorphic potential (66–85%) and broader natural allelic diversity (6–64%) detected by genome-wide SNPs among accessions signify their efficacy for monitoring introgression and transferring target trait-regulating genomic (gene) regions/allelic variants from wild to cultivated Cicer gene pools for genetic improvement. The population-specific assignment of wild Cicer accessions pertaining to the primary gene pool are more influenced by geographical origin/phenotypic characteristics than species/gene-pools of origination. The functional significance of allelic variants (non-synonymous and regulatory SNPs) scanned from transcription factors and stress-responsive genes in differentiating wild accessions (with potential known sources of yield-contributing and stress tolerance traits) from cultivated desi and kabuli accessions, fine-mapping/map-based cloning of QTLs and determination of LD patterns across wild and cultivated gene-pools are suitably elucidated. The correlation between phenotypic (agromorphological traits) and molecular diversity-based admixed domestication patterns within six structured populations of wild and cultivated accessions via genome-wide SNPs was apparent. This suggests utility of whole genome SNPs as a potential resource for identifying naturally selected trait-regulating genomic targets/functional allelic variants adaptive to diverse agroclimatic regions for genetic enhancement of cultivated gene-pools.
Description: Accepted date: 29 June 2015
URI: http://172.16.0.77:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/484
ISSN: 2045-2322
Appears in Collections:Institutional Publications

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