Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2005
María José Gonzalo; M. Oliver; Jordi Garcia-Mas; Amparo Monfort; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; Nurit Katzir; Pere Arús; Antonio J. Monforte
A set of 118 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers has been developed in melon from two different sources: genomic libraries (gSSR) and expressed sequence-tag (EST) databases (EST-SSR). Forty-nine percent of the markers showed polymorphism between the ‘Piel de Sapo’ (PS) and PI161375 melon genotypes used as parents for the mapping populations. Similar polymorphism levels were found in gSSR (51.2%) and EST-SSR (45.5%). Two populations, F2 and a set of double haploid lines (DHLs), developed from the same parent genotypes were used for map construction. Twenty-three SSRs and 79 restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), evenly distributed through the melon genome, were used to anchor the maps of both populations. Ten cucumber SSRs, 41 gSSRs, 16 EST-SSR, three single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers, and the Nsv locus were added in the DHL population. The maps developed in the F2 and DHL populations were co-linear, with similar lengths, except in linkage groups G1, G9, and G10. There was segregation distortion in a higher proportion of markers in the DHL population compared with the F2, probably caused by selection during the construction of DHLs through in vitro culture. After map merging, a composite genetic map was obtained including 327 transferable markers: 226 RFLPs, 97 SSRs, three SNPs, and the Nsv locus. The map length is 1,021 cM, distributed in 12 linkage groups, and map density is 3.11 cM/marker. SSR markers alone cover nearly 80% of the map length. This map is proposed as a basis for a framework melon map to be merged with other maps and as an anchor point for map comparison between species of the Cucurbitaceae family.
Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2004
Antonio J. Monforte; M. Oliver; María José Gonzalo; José María Alvarez Alvarez; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; Pere Arús
Two populations [an F2 and a set of 77 double haploid lines (DHLs)] developed from a cross between a ‘Piel de Sapo’ cultivar (PS) and the exotic Korean accession PI 161375 were used to detect QTLs involved in melon fruit quality traits: earliness (EA), fruit shape (FS), fruit weight (FW) and sugar content (SSC); and loci involved in the colour traits: external colour (ECOL) and flesh colour (FC). High variation was found, showing transgressive segregations for all traits. The highest correlation among experiments was observed for FS and the lowest for FW and SSC. Correlations among traits within experiments were, in general, not significant. QTL analysis, performed by Composite Interval Mapping, allowed the detection of nine QTLs for EA, eight for FS, six for FW and five for SSC. Major QTLs (R2>25%) were detected for all traits. QTLs for different traits were no clearly co-localised, suggesting low pleiotropic effects at QTLs. Sixty-one per cent of them were detected in two or more experiments. QTLs for FS were detected in more trials than QTLs for FW and SSC, confirming that FS is under highly hereditable polygenic control. ECOL segregated as yellow:green in both experimental populations. The genetic control of ECOL was found to be complex, probably involving more than two loci with epistatic interactions. One of these loci was mapped on linkage group 9, but the other loci could not be clearly resolved. FC segregated as white:green:orange. The locus responsible for the green FC was mapped on linkage group 1, and it was proposed to correspond to the previously described locus gf. The genetic control of orange FC was complex: two loci in linkage groups 2 and 12 were associated with orange flesh, but larger population sizes would be necessary to elucidate completely the genetic control of orange flesh in this cross. Exotic alleles from PI161375 showed beneficial effects on EA, FW and SSC, indicating the usefulness of PI 161375 as a new source of genetic variability to improve European and American cultivars.
BMC Genomics | 2011
Christian Clepet; Tarek Joobeur; Yi Zheng; Delphine Jublot; Mingyun Huang; Verónica Truniger; Adnane Boualem; Maria Elena Hernandez-Gonzalez; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; Vitaly Portnoy; Albert Mascarell-Creus; Ana I. Caño-Delgado; Nurit Katzir; Abdelhafid Bendahmane; James J. Giovannoni; Miguel A. Aranda; Jordi Garcia-Mas; Zhangjun Fei
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 1997
Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; Elisabet Claveria; Agustin Huerta
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 1995
Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; Elisabet Claveria
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2005
Elisabet Claveria; Jordi Garcia-Mas; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2002
Mónica Morales; Marisol Luis-Arteaga; José María Alvarez Alvarez; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; Amparo Monfort; Pere Arús; Jordi Garcia-Mas
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 2011
Maria Jose Gonzalo; Elisabet Claveria; Antonio J. Monforte; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan
Cucurbitaceae 2000. Proceedings of the 7th EUCARPIA meeting on cucurbit breeding and genetics, Ma'ale Ha Hamisha, Israel, 19-23 March, 2000. | 2000
M. Oliver; Jordi Garcia-Mas; Manuel López Morales; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; M. C. de Vicente; H. Gómez; H. van Leeuwen; Amparo Monfort; Pere Puigdomènech; Pere Arús; Nurit Katzir; H. S. Paris
Journal of The American Society for Horticultural Science | 1996
Sumonthip Bunnag; Ramon Dolcet-Sanjuan; David W. S. Mok; Machteld C. Mok