Genetic mapping of the evergrowing gene in peach [Prunus persica (L.) Batsch].

Publication Overview
TitleGenetic mapping of the evergrowing gene in peach [Prunus persica (L.) Batsch]
AuthorsWang Y, Georgi LL, Reighard GL, Scorza R, Abbott AG
TypeJournal Article
Journal NameThe Journal of heredity
Volume93
Issue5
Year2002
Page(s)352-8
CitationWang Y, Georgi LL, Reighard GL, Scorza R, Abbott AG. Genetic mapping of the evergrowing gene in peach [Prunus persica (L.) Batsch]. The Journal of heredity. 2002; 93(5):352-8.

Abstract

In temperate locations, terminal apices on evergrowing (also called evergreen) peach trees keep growing in winter until killed by low temperatures, while the lateral buds go into dormancy. A recessive allele of a single gene (evergrowing or evg) controls this trait in peach. The amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) technique and bulked segregant analysis were applied to construct a local genetic linkage map for the evg gene from the cross Empress op op dwarf x Evergrowing (P.I. 442380). This map, comprising nine AFLP markers and the evg locus, covers a total genetic distance of 79.3 cM. Four dominant AFLP markers (EAT/MCAC, ETT/MCCA2, EAT/MCTA, and ETT/MACC) were linked to the evg locus at distances of 1, 5.3, 6.7, and 11.7 cM, respectively. EAT/MCAC and EAT/MCTA were converted into polymorphic sequence-tagged sites. Microsatellite markers in the evg region were developed from peach bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) clones that hybridized to the AFLP marker fragments. Using three microsatellite anchor markers (pchgms12, pchgms17, and pchgms19), the local genetic linkage map was integrated into one minor linkage group of a previously constructed peach rootstock genetic linkage map. Three AFLP markers from the rootstock genetic linkage map were found linked to the evg locus.

Features
This publication contains information about 9 features:
Feature NameUniquenameType
022B09 (T7DSDNA)022B09 (T7DSDNA)genetic_marker
035A23 (SP6OVG)035A23 (SP6OVG)genetic_marker
AF516364AF516364.1region
AF516363AF516363.1region
AF516362AF516362.1region
AF516361AF516361.1region
AF516360AF516360.1region
AF516359AF516359.1region
EvergrowingEvergrowing-Evgheritable_phenotypic_marker