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Dive into the research topics where Sami Doganlar is active.

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Featured researches published by Sami Doganlar.


BMC Plant Biology | 2010

Salt tolerance in Solanum pennellii: antioxidant response and related QTL

Anne Frary; Deniz Göl; Davut Keleş; Bilal Ökmen; Hasan Pinar; Hasan Özgür Şığva; Ahmet Yemenicioğlu; Sami Doganlar

BackgroundExcessive soil salinity is an important problem for agriculture, however, salt tolerance is a complex trait that is not easily bred into plants. Exposure of cultivated tomato to salt stress has been reported to result in increased antioxidant content and activity. Salt tolerance of the related wild species, Solanum pennellii, has also been associated with similar changes in antioxidants. In this work, S. lycopersicum M82, S. pennellii LA716 and a S. pennellii introgression line (IL) population were evaluated for growth and their levels of antioxidant activity (total water-soluble antioxidant activity), major antioxidant compounds (phenolic and flavonoid contents) and antioxidant enzyme activities (superoxide dismutase, catalase, ascorbate peroxidase and peroxidase) under both control and salt stress (150 mM NaCl) conditions. These data were then used to identify quantitative trait loci (QTL) responsible for controlling the antioxidant parameters under both stress and nonstress conditions.ResultsUnder control conditions, cultivated tomato had higher levels of all antioxidants (except superoxide dismutase) than S. pennellii. However, under salt stress, the wild species showed greater induction of all antioxidants except peroxidase. The ILs showed diverse responses to salinity and proved very useful for the identification of QTL. Thus, 125 loci for antioxidant content under control and salt conditions were detected. Eleven of the total antioxidant activity and phenolic content QTL matched loci identified in an independent study using the same population, thereby reinforcing the validity of the loci. In addition, the growth responses of the ILs were evaluated to identify lines with favorable growth and antioxidant profiles.ConclusionsPlants have a complex antioxidant response when placed under salt stress. Some loci control antioxidant content under all conditions while others are responsible for antioxidant content only under saline or nonsaline conditions. The localization of QTL for these traits and the identification of lines with specific antioxidant and growth responses may be useful for breeding potentially salt tolerant tomato cultivars having higher antioxidant levels under nonstress and salt stress conditions.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1999

The genetic basis of pear-shaped tomato fruit

Hsin-Mei Ku; Sami Doganlar; K.-Y. Chen; S. D. Tanksley

Abstract Molecular-marker analysis of a cross between yellow pear, a tomato variety bearing small, pear-shaped fruit, and the round-fruited, wild species, Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium LA1589, revealed that pear-shaped fruit is determined largely by a major QTL on chromosome 2 and, to a lesser extent, a minor QTL on chromosome 10. The locus on chromosome 2 was also detected in a cross between yellow pear and the round-fruited introgression line (IL2–5) which carried the distal portion of chromosome 2 from the Lycopersicon pennellii genome. Based on its map position, we propose that the locus detected on chromosome 2 is the same as a locus referred to as ovate in the early tomato literature (Linstrom 1926, 1927). The fruit-shape index (length/diameter) and neck constriction were highly correlated in both populations suggesting that ovate exerts control over both traits or that the genes for these traits are tightly linked on chromosome 2. Using two-way ANOVA test, the minor QTL on chromosome 10 showed no significant interaction with the ovate locus on chromosome 2 with respect to the fruit-shape index. For ovate round fruit was dominant to elongated fruit in the L. pimpinellifolium populations, but additive in the IL2–5 population. Thus far, no genes controlling fruit shape have been cloned. The molecular mapping of the ovate locus may ultimately lead to its isolation via map-based cloning.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2003

QTL analysis of morphological traits in eggplant and implications for conservation of gene function during evolution of solanaceous species

Anne Frary; Sami Doganlar; Marie-Christine Daunay; S. D. Tanksley

Abstract. An interspecific F2 population from a cross between cultivated eggplant, Solanum melongena, and its wild relative, S. linnaeanum, was analyzed for quantitative trait loci (QTL) affecting leaf, flower, fruit and plant traits. A total of 58 plants were genotyped for 207 restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) markers and phenotyped for 18 characters. One to eight loci were detected for each trait with a total of 63 QTL identified. Overall, 46% of the QTL had allelic effects that were the reverse of those predicted from the parental phenotypes. Wild alleles that were agronomically superior to the cultivated alleles were identified for 42% of the QTL identified for flowering time, flower and fruit number, fruit set, calyx size and fruit glossiness. Comparison of the map positions of eggplant loci with those for similar traits in tomato, potato and pepper revealed that 12 of the QTL have putative orthologs in at least one of these other species and that putative orthology was most often observed between eggplant and tomato. Traits showing potential orthology were: leaf length, shape and lobing; days to flowering; number of flowers per inflorescence; plant height and apex, leaf and stem hairiness. The functionally conserved loci included a major leaf lobing QTL (llob6.1) that is putatively orthologous to the potato leaf (c) and/or Petroselinum (Pts) mutants of tomato, two flowering time QTL (dtf1.1, dtf2.1) that also have putative counterparts in tomato and four QTL for trichomes that have potential orthologs in tomato and potato. These results support the mounting evidence of conservation of gene function during the evolution of eggplant and its relatives from their last common ancestor and indicate that this conservation was not limited to domestication traits.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2000

The genetic basis of seed-weight variation: tomato as a model system

Sami Doganlar; Anne Frary; S. D. Tanksley

Abstract The seeds of domesticated plants are normally much larger than those of their wild counterparts. This change in seed weight was most likely in response to the selection pressure for yield, uniform germination and seedling vigor which was exerted by humans during domestication. However, despite the evolutionary and agronomic significance of seed weight, very little is know about the genetic and developmental controls of this trait; and, thus far, none of the genes in this pathway have been isolated from any plant species. QTL mapping experiments conducted in tomato during the past decade have allowed the identification of many seed-weight QTLs and have also revealed that only a few loci are responsible for the majority of the seed-weight changes that accompanied the domestication of tomato. This review presents a consensus map for seed weight QTL identified in previously published reports and in unpublished results from our laboratory. This summary of seed-weight QTL data allows for the identification of the major loci controlling this trait in the genus Lycopersicon. It is hoped that this work will allow the elucidation of this important phenotypic transition that occurred during crop-plant domestication and will also provide the starting point for the cloning of a gene responsible for seed-weight variation.


International Journal of Food Properties | 2009

Total antioxidant activity and total phenolic contents in different Turkish eggplant (Solanum melongena L.) cultivars.

Bilal Ökmen; Hasan Ozgur Sıgva; Sevgi Mutlu; Sami Doganlar; Ahmet Yemenicioğlu; Anne Frary

In this study, total water soluble antioxidant activity and phenolic content of 26 eggplant ( Solanum melongena L. ) cultivars were investigated. Total water soluble antioxidant activity of the cultivars varied from 2664 to 8247 μmolTrolox/kg, which is a 3.1-fold difference. Cultivars also showed significant variation for total phenolic contents ranging from 615 to 1376 mg/kg, a 2.2-fold difference. The two traits were significantly correlated and results of this study suggested that breeders can use the information to develop eggplant cultivars with high antioxidant activity.


Euphytica | 2004

Comparative fine mapping of fruit quality QTLs on chromosome 4 introgressions derived from two wild tomato species

Heather Yates; Anne Frary; Sami Doganlar; Anna Julia Frampton; Nancy T. Eannetta; John Uhlig; Steven D. Tanksley

Despite their unsuitability for agricultural production, the wild relatives of crop species represent a largely untapped resource of novel QTLs potentially useful for crop plant improvement. In this regard, previous introgression studies, involving several different wild tomato species, have shown that the long arm of chromosome 4 contains QTLs for many horticulturally important traits including soluble solids content, fruit shape, lycopene content and biochemical composition. However, these earlier studies were unable to determine how many genes control these traits and whether genes affecting the same character from different wild species are allelic or not. In an effort to shed light on these issues,we have constructed a series of lines containing small, overlapping introgressions for portions of the long arm of chromosome 4 from L. peruvianum and L. hirsutum and tested these lines in replicated field trials. The results provide evidence for multiple, non-allelic loci controlling soluble solids and fruit weight. They also show that the loci controlling some traits (e.g. fruit shape, fruit weight, epidermal reticulation) co-localize to the same portions of chromosome 4, a result that maybe attributed to pleiotropy and/or gene dense areas with lower than average recombination. The implications of these finding for molecular breeding and utilization of exotic germplasm are discussed.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1998

Molecular mapping of the py-1 gene for resistance to corky root rot (Pyrenochaeta lycopersici) in tomato

Sami Doganlar; J. Dodson; B. Gabor; T. Beck-Bunn; C. Crossman; S. D. Tanksley

Abstract We report the molecular mapping of the py-1 gene for resistance to corky root rot [Pyrenochaeta lycopersici (Schneider and Gerlach)] in tomato using RAPD and RFLP marker analysis. DNA from near-isogenic lines (NILs) of tomato differing in corky root rot resistance was screened with 575 random oligonucleotide primers to detect polymorphic DNAs linked to py-1. Three primers (OPW-04, OPC-02, OPG-19) revealed polymorphisms between the NILs. Twelve resistant and eight susceptible DNA pools derived from segregating F3 families were used to confirm that the RAPD markers were linked to the py-1 gene. Two of the linked amplified fragments, corresponding to OPW-04 and OPC-02, were subsequently cloned and mapped on the tomato molecular linkage map as RFLPs. These clones were located between TG40 and CT31 on the short arm of chromosome 3. Further analysis with selected RFLP markers showed that 7% (8.8 cM) of chromosome 3 of the resistant line ‘Moboglan’ was introgressed from the L. peruvianum donor parent. Three RFLP markers (TG40, TG324, and TG479) from the introgressed part of chromosome 3 were converted to cleaved amplified polymorphism (CAP) markers for use in a polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay. These PCR markers will allow rapid large-scale screening of tomato populations for corky root rot resistance.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 2000

Identification and molecular mapping of loci controlling fruit ripening time in tomato

Sami Doganlar; S. D. Tanksley; Martha A. Mutschler

Abstract Using RAPD marker analysis, two quantitative trait loci (QTLs) associated with earliness due to reduced fruit-ripening time (days from anthesis to ripening = DTR) were identified and mapped in an F2 population derived from a cross between Lycopersicon esculentum’E6203’ (normal ripening) and Lycopersicon esculentum’Early Cherry’ (early ripening). One QTL, on chromosome 5, was associated with a reduction in both ripening time (5 days) and fruit weight (29.3%) and explained 15.8 and 13% of the total phenotypic variation for DTR and fruit weight, respectively. The other QTL, on chromosome 12, was primarily associated with a reduction only in ripening time (7 days) and explained 12.3% of the total phenotypic variation for DTR. The gene action at this QTL was found to be partially dominant (d/a=0.41). Together, these two QTLs explained 25.1% of the total phenotypic variation for DTR. Additionally, two QTLs associated with fruit weight were identified in the same F2 population and mapped to chromosomes 4 and 6, respectively. Together, these two QTLs explained 30.9% of the total phenotypc variation for fruit weight. For all QTLs, the ’Early Cherry’ alleles caused reductions in both ripening time and fruit weight. The polymorphic band for the most significant RAPD marker (OPAB-06), linked to the reduced ripening time QTL on chromosome 12, was converted to a cleaved amplified polymorphism (CAP) assay for marker-aided selection and further introgression of early ripening time (DTR) into cultivated tomato.


BMC Genomics | 2017

Genome-wide SNP discovery and QTL mapping for fruit quality traits in inbred backcross lines (IBLs) of solanum pimpinellifolium using genotyping by sequencing

Ibrahim Celik; Nergiz Gürbüz; Ali Tevfik Uncu; Anne Frary; Sami Doganlar

BackgroundSolanum pimpinellifolium has high breeding potential for fruit quality traits and has been used as a donor in tomato breeding programs. Unlocking the genetic potential of S. pimpinellifolium requires high-throughput polymorphism identification protocols for QTL mapping and introgression of favourable alleles into cultivated tomato by both positive and background selection.ResultsIn this study we identified SNP loci using a genotyping by sequencing (GBS) approach in an IBL mapping population derived from the cross between a high yielding fresh market tomato and S. pimpinellifolium (LA1589) as the recurrent and donor parents, respectively. A total of 120,983,088 reads were generated by the Illumina HiSeq next-generation sequencing platform. From these reads 448,539 sequence tags were generated. A majority of the sequence tags (84.4%) were uniquely aligned to the tomato genome. A total of 3.125 unique SNP loci were identified as a result of tag alignment to the genome assembly and were used in QTL analysis of 11 fruit quality traits. As a result, 37 QTLs were identified. S. pimpinellifolium contributed favourable alleles for 16 QTLs (43.2%), thus confirming the high breeding potential of this wild species.ConclusionsThe present work introduced a set of SNPs at sufficiently high density for QTL mapping in populations derived from S. pimpinellifolium (LA1589). Moreover, this study demonstrated the high efficiency of the GBS approach for SNP identification, genotyping and QTL mapping in an interspecific tomato population.


Theoretical and Applied Genetics | 1997

High-resolution genetic map of the Lv resistance locus in tomato

J. Chunwongse; Sami Doganlar; C. Crossman; J. Jiang; S. D. Tanksley

Abstract Bulked segregant analysis and high-resolution mapping were used to pinpoint the position of the Lv gene for resistance to Leveillula taurica in tomato. Mapping in an F2, corresponding to more than 3800 gametes, indicates that Lv is positioned within the 0.84-cM interval defined by the RFLP markers CT121 and CT129, with the closest marker, CT121, being only 0.16 cM from the gene. The tight linkage of these markers demonstrates their usefulness in marker-assisted breeding for Lv, and the high-resolution map provides a starting a starting point for positional cloning of this resistance gene.

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Anne Frary

İzmir Institute of Technology

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Ibrahim Celik

İzmir Institute of Technology

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Amy Frary

Mount Holyoke College

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Jens Allmer

İzmir Institute of Technology

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Ali Tevfik Uncu

İzmir Institute of Technology

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Ayse Ozgur Uncu

İzmir Institute of Technology

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Marie-Christine Daunay

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Bilal Ökmen

İzmir Institute of Technology

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