Publication Overview
TitleDNA Fingerprinting of Closely Related Cultivars of Sweet Cherry
AuthorsWiersma, P. A., Erogul, D., Ali, S.
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameJournal of the American Society for Horticultural Science
Volume143
Issue4
Year2018
Page(s)282-288
CitationWiersma, P. A., Erogul, D., Ali, S. (2018). "DNA Fingerprinting of Closely Related Cultivars of Sweet Cherry." Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science 143(4): 282-288.

Abstract

Simple sequence repeat (SSR) and single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers were evaluated in an effort to reliably DNA fingerprint sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) cultivars and advanced selections from the breeding program at the Summerland Research and Development Center (Summerland, BC, Canada). SSR markers were found that differentiated the 35 cultivars and selections tested. However, groups of cultivars closely related to the parental cultivars, Lapins and Sweetheart, were differentiated by only a few SSR markers each. These last few markers were discovered by specifically screening within these small groups of cultivars and the resulting markers had lower discriminating power (Dj) statistics within the full set of 35 cultivars and selections. To further characterize the differences in one of these closely related groups, SNP markers were identified in the cultivar Sweetheart and an analysis was made of how these markers segregated into three of its open-pollinated progeny. Large blocks of the ‘Sweetheart’ genome (34%) did not contain informative SNP markers, which was consistent with its ancestry where the cultivar Van is both a parent and grandparent. The three progeny cultivars differed from ‘Sweetheart’ at 14%, 31%, and 29% of the 3011 SNP positions tested. These were located in blocks of linked haplotypes covering from 2.5 to 20 million bps each and were distinct for the three cultivars. The cultivar Staccato, which required the most effort for SSR marker discrimination, also had the lowest number of SNP position differences from ‘Sweetheart’ (14%). These informative SNP markers were located in only five small regions of the sweet cherry genome, which also contained the discriminating SSR markers and provides an explanation for the difficulty of locating SSR markers for this cultivar. In addition to clearly differentiating these cultivars, this SNP analysis shows the level of variation expected within this closely related group.
Features
This publication contains information about 3,011 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
Pav_SUsnp1_0776Pav_SUsnp1_0776genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0777Pav_SUsnp1_0777genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0778Pav_SUsnp1_0778genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0779Pav_SUsnp1_0779genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0780Pav_SUsnp1_0780genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0781Pav_SUsnp1_0781genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0782Pav_SUsnp1_0782genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0783Pav_SUsnp1_0783genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0784Pav_SUsnp1_0784genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0785Pav_SUsnp1_0785genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0786Pav_SUsnp1_0786genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0787Pav_SUsnp1_0787genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0788Pav_SUsnp1_0788genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0789Pav_SUsnp1_0789genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0790Pav_SUsnp1_0790genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0791Pav_SUsnp1_0791genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0792Pav_SUsnp1_0792genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0793Pav_SUsnp1_0793genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0794Pav_SUsnp1_0794genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0795Pav_SUsnp1_0795genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0796Pav_SUsnp1_0796genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0797Pav_SUsnp1_0797genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0798Pav_SUsnp1_0798genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0799Pav_SUsnp1_0799genetic_marker
Pav_SUsnp1_0800Pav_SUsnp1_0800genetic_marker

Pages

Projects
This publication contains information about 1 projects:
Project NameDescription
Sweet_Cherry_Wiersma_2018Sweet_Cherry_Wiersma_2018