Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz
Chapingo Autonomous University
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Featured researches published by Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz.
Plant Molecular Biology Reporter | 2016
Samir Samah; Claudia Verónica De Teodoro Pardo; Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Ernestina Valadez-Moctezuma
The Opuntia (prickly pear) genus, an important horticultural crop in Mexico, is essentially a fruit crop with two variants: sweet (“tunas”) or acid (“xoconostles”) fruits; it is also a source of vegetables “nopalitos” or fodder for livestock, among other uses. Its taxonomical classification has been reported as complex, although few studies on the genetic structure of Mexican Opuntia are available, and genetic differences between the two types of fruits are unknown. Opuntia genotype identification and classification are still mainly based on morphological characters. In this study, the genetic diversity of Mexican Opuntia germplasm with agronomic and economic importance was revealed, using 88 accessions and 13 SSR markers, in an attempt to explore the genetic relationships among them. A total of 159 alleles were detected ranging from 7 to 23 per locus with an average of 12.2. The SSR markers generated unique fingerprints for each Opuntia accession confirming their usefulness for genetic analysis. The accessions’ grouping was defined by several complementary clustering methods, and the moderate incongruences between the different methods did not influence the overall clustering. DAPC and STRUCTURE analyses grouped the accessions into five groups, thus confirming the incorrect delimitation of species in this genus. The following species had no clear boundaries: Opuntia ficus-indica, Opuntia albicarpa, Opuntia megacantha, Opuntia streptacantha, Opuntia lasiacantha, and Opuntia hyptiacantha. However, Opuntia robusta was separated from the rest of the species. Opuntia joconostle and Opuntia matudae, which produce acid fruits, tended to differ from the others. Median-joining simulation classified all genotypes into a complex network, and both linear and reticular ties between Mexican Opuntia genotypes were revealed. The genetic distance revealed in the present study shows the importance of Mexican accessions for conservation and use in breeding programs.
Revista Fitotecnia Mexicana | 2006
Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Juan Saúl Barajas Pérez
Revista Fitotecnia Mexicana | 1998
Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Salvador Miranda Colín; Armando García Velázquez; Fernando Castillo González
Revista mexicana de micología | 2011
Juan Saúl Barajas Pérez; Roberto Montes-Belmont; Federico Castrejón Ayala; Hilda Elizabeth Flores-Moctezuma; Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz
Revista Fitotecnia Mexicana | 2010
Moisés Campos Muñiz; Juan L. Medina Pitalúa; Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz
Revista Colombiana De Entomologia | 2015
Edgar E. Mendoza-García; Laura D. Ortega-Arenas; Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Francisco Díaz Cedillo; Juan A. Villanueva-Jiménez; J. Isabel López-Arroyo; Rafael Pérez-Pacheco
Journal of Agricultural Chemistry and Environment | 2014
Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Francisco Díaz Cedillo; Daniel Hernández Medina; Arturo Curiel Rodríguez
Agrociencia | 2000
Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Martha Hernández Rodríguez; Yves Savidan; Nina M. Bárcenas Ortega
Agrociencia | 2000
Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz; Martha Hernández Rodríguez; Yves Savidan; Nina M. Bárcenas Ortega
Revista Mexicana de Ciencias Agrícolas | 2018
Edgar López López; Margarita Gisela Peña Ortega; María Teresa Colinas León; Francisco Díaz Cedillo; Miguel Ángel Serrato Cruz