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Título

Relationships among Brassica napus germplasm from Spain and Great Britain as determined by RAPD Markers

AutorCartea González, María Elena CSIC ORCID; Soengas Fernández, María del Pilar; Picoaga, Ana CSIC; Ordás Pérez, Amando CSIC ORCID
Palabras claveBrassica napus
Genetic diversity
Molecular markers
Numerical taxonomy
Fecha de publicaciónsep-2005
EditorSpringer Nature
CitaciónGenetic Resources and Crop Evolution 52 (6): 655-662 (2005)
ResumenThe genetic diversity and the relationships among a collection of Brassica napus L. European populations were evaluated using random amplified polymorphic DNA markers. The study included 33 accessions of B. napus collected from Galicia (northwestern Spain) and 18 British cultivars, 16 accessions of B. napus and two accessions of Brassica oleracea L. used as controls. DNA from 25 individuals per population was analyzed using 18 decamer primers. One hundred thirty-eight amplification products were scored of which 105 were polymorphic. These bands ranged in size from 350 to 2500 base pairs. Similarity coefficients and cluster analysis were computed and six groups were obtained. Cluster I was the largest and included all the landraces from northwestern Spain, except two accessions that grouped separately into Clusters III and IV, respectively. A low level of genetic variability was detected among the B. napus Spanish genotypes, while considerable diversity was present among the British ones, which grouped into three groups, two main clusters and one group formed by one accession. Cluster II included all commercial varieties grown in Great Britain whereas Cluster V grouped local varieties maintained by the growers for many years. Cluster VI was a singularity formed by one entry. British accessions of B. oleracea had the greatest dissimilarity with all the other populations and grouped separately in Clusters VII and VIII. As conclusion, B. napus landraces used in northwestern Spain as leafy-green vegetable probably have an independent origin from B. napus crops grown in other European regions. Besides, separate domestication in northwestern Spain and Great Britain for a different end use might have led to two distinct gene pools.
Versión del editorhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10722-003-6014-8
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10261/102913
DOI10.1007/s10722-003-6014-8
ISSN0925-9864
E-ISSN1573-5109
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