Examination of Genetic Diversity of Common Bean from the Western Balkans
2015
Преузимање 🢃
Аутори
Maras, MarkoPipan, Barbara
Sustar-Vozlić, Jelka
Todorović, Vida
Durić, Gordana
Vasić, Mirjana
Kratovalieva, Suzana
Ibusoska, Afrodita
Agić, Rukie
Matotan, Zdravko
Cupić, Tihomir
Meglić, Vladimir
Чланак у часопису (Објављена верзија)
Метаподаци
Приказ свих података о документуАпстракт
In this study, genetic diversity of 119 accessions of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) from five former Yugoslav republics constituting the western Balkans was assessed by 13 microsatellite markers. This set of markers has proven before to efficiently distinguish between bean genotypes and assign them to either the Andean or the Mesoamerican gene pool of origin. In this study, 118 alleles were detected or 9.1 per locus on average. Four groups (i.e., Slovene, Croatian, Bosnian, and Serbian) showed similarly high levels of genetic diversity as estimated by the number of different alleles, number of effective alleles, Shannon's information index, and expected heterozygosity. Mildly narrower genetic diversity was identified within a group of Macedonian accessions; however, this germplasm yielded the highest number of private alleles. All five germplasms share a great portion of genetic diversity as indicated by the analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA). On the basis of the scored number o...f migrants, we concluded that the most intensive gene flow in the region exists in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Cluster analysis based on collected molecular data classified the accessions into two large clusters that corresponded to two gene pools of origin (i.e., Andean and Mesoamerican). We found that Andean genotypes are more prevalent than Mesoamerican in all studied countries, except Macedonia, where the two gene pools are represented evenly. This could indicate that common bean was introduced into the western Balkans mainly from the Mediterranean Basin. Bayesian cluster analysis revealed that in the area studied an additional variation exists which is related to the Andean gene pool. Different scenarios of the origin of this variation are discussed in the article.
Кључне речи:
Phaseolus vulgaris / landraces / gene pools / gene flow / SSRsИзвор:
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science, 2015, 140, 4, 308-316Издавач:
- Amer Soc Horticultural Science, Alexandria
Финансирање / пројекти:
- CROPSUSTAIN - Integrated Approaches for Sustainable Crop Production in Slovenia: Resisting Global Changes (EU-FP7-316205)
- SEE-ERA.NET.PLUS FP7 Regional Programme [168/01]
- Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS)[P4-0072]
- Ministry of Science and Technology of the Republic of Srpska
DOI: 10.21273/JASHS.140.4.308
ISSN: 0003-1062
WoS: 000359392900002
Scopus: 2-s2.0-84938929610
Колекције
Институција/група
FiVeRTY - JOUR AU - Maras, Marko AU - Pipan, Barbara AU - Sustar-Vozlić, Jelka AU - Todorović, Vida AU - Durić, Gordana AU - Vasić, Mirjana AU - Kratovalieva, Suzana AU - Ibusoska, Afrodita AU - Agić, Rukie AU - Matotan, Zdravko AU - Cupić, Tihomir AU - Meglić, Vladimir PY - 2015 UR - http://fiver.ifvcns.rs/handle/123456789/1421 AB - In this study, genetic diversity of 119 accessions of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) from five former Yugoslav republics constituting the western Balkans was assessed by 13 microsatellite markers. This set of markers has proven before to efficiently distinguish between bean genotypes and assign them to either the Andean or the Mesoamerican gene pool of origin. In this study, 118 alleles were detected or 9.1 per locus on average. Four groups (i.e., Slovene, Croatian, Bosnian, and Serbian) showed similarly high levels of genetic diversity as estimated by the number of different alleles, number of effective alleles, Shannon's information index, and expected heterozygosity. Mildly narrower genetic diversity was identified within a group of Macedonian accessions; however, this germplasm yielded the highest number of private alleles. All five germplasms share a great portion of genetic diversity as indicated by the analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA). On the basis of the scored number of migrants, we concluded that the most intensive gene flow in the region exists in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Cluster analysis based on collected molecular data classified the accessions into two large clusters that corresponded to two gene pools of origin (i.e., Andean and Mesoamerican). We found that Andean genotypes are more prevalent than Mesoamerican in all studied countries, except Macedonia, where the two gene pools are represented evenly. This could indicate that common bean was introduced into the western Balkans mainly from the Mediterranean Basin. Bayesian cluster analysis revealed that in the area studied an additional variation exists which is related to the Andean gene pool. Different scenarios of the origin of this variation are discussed in the article. PB - Amer Soc Horticultural Science, Alexandria T2 - Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science T1 - Examination of Genetic Diversity of Common Bean from the Western Balkans EP - 316 IS - 4 SP - 308 VL - 140 DO - 10.21273/JASHS.140.4.308 ER -
@article{ author = "Maras, Marko and Pipan, Barbara and Sustar-Vozlić, Jelka and Todorović, Vida and Durić, Gordana and Vasić, Mirjana and Kratovalieva, Suzana and Ibusoska, Afrodita and Agić, Rukie and Matotan, Zdravko and Cupić, Tihomir and Meglić, Vladimir", year = "2015", abstract = "In this study, genetic diversity of 119 accessions of common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) from five former Yugoslav republics constituting the western Balkans was assessed by 13 microsatellite markers. This set of markers has proven before to efficiently distinguish between bean genotypes and assign them to either the Andean or the Mesoamerican gene pool of origin. In this study, 118 alleles were detected or 9.1 per locus on average. Four groups (i.e., Slovene, Croatian, Bosnian, and Serbian) showed similarly high levels of genetic diversity as estimated by the number of different alleles, number of effective alleles, Shannon's information index, and expected heterozygosity. Mildly narrower genetic diversity was identified within a group of Macedonian accessions; however, this germplasm yielded the highest number of private alleles. All five germplasms share a great portion of genetic diversity as indicated by the analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA). On the basis of the scored number of migrants, we concluded that the most intensive gene flow in the region exists in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Cluster analysis based on collected molecular data classified the accessions into two large clusters that corresponded to two gene pools of origin (i.e., Andean and Mesoamerican). We found that Andean genotypes are more prevalent than Mesoamerican in all studied countries, except Macedonia, where the two gene pools are represented evenly. This could indicate that common bean was introduced into the western Balkans mainly from the Mediterranean Basin. Bayesian cluster analysis revealed that in the area studied an additional variation exists which is related to the Andean gene pool. Different scenarios of the origin of this variation are discussed in the article.", publisher = "Amer Soc Horticultural Science, Alexandria", journal = "Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science", title = "Examination of Genetic Diversity of Common Bean from the Western Balkans", pages = "316-308", number = "4", volume = "140", doi = "10.21273/JASHS.140.4.308" }
Maras, M., Pipan, B., Sustar-Vozlić, J., Todorović, V., Durić, G., Vasić, M., Kratovalieva, S., Ibusoska, A., Agić, R., Matotan, Z., Cupić, T.,& Meglić, V.. (2015). Examination of Genetic Diversity of Common Bean from the Western Balkans. in Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science Amer Soc Horticultural Science, Alexandria., 140(4), 308-316. https://doi.org/10.21273/JASHS.140.4.308
Maras M, Pipan B, Sustar-Vozlić J, Todorović V, Durić G, Vasić M, Kratovalieva S, Ibusoska A, Agić R, Matotan Z, Cupić T, Meglić V. Examination of Genetic Diversity of Common Bean from the Western Balkans. in Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science. 2015;140(4):308-316. doi:10.21273/JASHS.140.4.308 .
Maras, Marko, Pipan, Barbara, Sustar-Vozlić, Jelka, Todorović, Vida, Durić, Gordana, Vasić, Mirjana, Kratovalieva, Suzana, Ibusoska, Afrodita, Agić, Rukie, Matotan, Zdravko, Cupić, Tihomir, Meglić, Vladimir, "Examination of Genetic Diversity of Common Bean from the Western Balkans" in Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science, 140, no. 4 (2015):308-316, https://doi.org/10.21273/JASHS.140.4.308 . .