Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, India Section B: Biological Sciences | 2019

Genetic Diversity Analysis Reveals Strong Population Structure in Sorghum Germplasm Collection

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Population structure and genetic variability among seven groups of 44 parental lines of sorghum, including mid-season drought-tolerant, mid-season drought-susceptible, stay green lines, terminal drought-tolerant, saline-tolerant, saline-susceptible, high Fe–Zn lines and a wild genotype as an out-group were assessed using three dominant markers namely ISSR, RAPD, and DAMD. Wide range genome coverage of sorghum has been attained using these markers, which produced about 263 fragments of amplified products and the analysis accounted for a higher polymorphism (84.6%) and the polymorphic loci (72.65%) which produced a greater level of genetic distance among the genotypes. These findings are consistent with the UPGMA and neighbor-joining clustering of genotypes by individual markers. The existence of greater genetic variation at an intrapopulation level than at the interpopulation level was indicated by principal coordinate analysis and principal component analysis where the individuals of different groups failed to form distinct clusters rather mixed up along the axis. The Bayesian model-based structure analysis also identified the population structure with high admixture and diversity among the studied populations. The study also showed the non-existence of pure lines from this collection. Therefore, markers used in the study efficiently arrived at the phylogenetic relationships of 44 domesticated sorghum lines, and the obtained information can be implemented in breeding programs of this important food and forage resource for biofortification and the development of varieties with abiotic stress tolerance.

Volume 90
Pages 179-190
DOI 10.1007/s40011-019-01095-9
Language English
Journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, India Section B: Biological Sciences

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