Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers

Cultivated bananas (Musa spp.) have undergone domestication patterns involving crosses of wild progenitors followed by long periods of clonal propagation. Majority of cultivated bananas are polyploids with different constitutive subgenomes and knowledge on phylogenies to their progenitors at the spe...

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Autores principales: Muiruri, K.S., Britt, A., Amugune, N.O., Nguu, E., Chan, S., Tripathi, L.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89944
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author Muiruri, K.S.
Britt, A.
Amugune, N.O.
Nguu, E.
Chan, S.
Tripathi, L.
author_browse Amugune, N.O.
Britt, A.
Chan, S.
Muiruri, K.S.
Nguu, E.
Tripathi, L.
author_facet Muiruri, K.S.
Britt, A.
Amugune, N.O.
Nguu, E.
Chan, S.
Tripathi, L.
author_sort Muiruri, K.S.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Cultivated bananas (Musa spp.) have undergone domestication patterns involving crosses of wild progenitors followed by long periods of clonal propagation. Majority of cultivated bananas are polyploids with different constitutive subgenomes and knowledge on phylogenies to their progenitors at the species and subspecies levels is essential. Here, the mitochondrial (NAD1) and nuclear (CENH3) markers were used to phylogenetically position cultivated banana genotypes to diploid progenitors. The CENH3 nuclear marker was used to identify a minimum representative haplotype number in polyploids and diploid bananas based on single nucleotide polymorphisms. The mitochondrial marker NAD1 was observed to be ideal in differentiating bananas of different genomic constitutions based on size of amplicons as well as sequence. The genotypes phylogenetically segregated based on the dominant genome; AAB genotypes grouped with AA and AAA, and the ABB together with BB. Both markers differentiated banana sections, but could not differentiate subspecies within the A genomic group. On the basis of CENH3 marker, a total of 13 haplotypes (five in both diploid and triploid, three in diploids, and rest unique to triploids) were identified from the genotypes tested. The presence of haplotypes, which were common in diploids and triploids, stipulate possibility of a shared ancestry in the genotypes involved in this study. Furthermore, the presence of multiple haplotypes in some diploid bananas indicates their being heterozygous. The haplotypes identified in this study are of importance because they can be used to check the level of homozygozity in breeding lines as well as to track segregation in progenies.
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spelling CGSpace899442025-11-11T10:09:07Z Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers Muiruri, K.S. Britt, A. Amugune, N.O. Nguu, E. Chan, S. Tripathi, L. bananas genotypes phylogeny haplotype genetics Cultivated bananas (Musa spp.) have undergone domestication patterns involving crosses of wild progenitors followed by long periods of clonal propagation. Majority of cultivated bananas are polyploids with different constitutive subgenomes and knowledge on phylogenies to their progenitors at the species and subspecies levels is essential. Here, the mitochondrial (NAD1) and nuclear (CENH3) markers were used to phylogenetically position cultivated banana genotypes to diploid progenitors. The CENH3 nuclear marker was used to identify a minimum representative haplotype number in polyploids and diploid bananas based on single nucleotide polymorphisms. The mitochondrial marker NAD1 was observed to be ideal in differentiating bananas of different genomic constitutions based on size of amplicons as well as sequence. The genotypes phylogenetically segregated based on the dominant genome; AAB genotypes grouped with AA and AAA, and the ABB together with BB. Both markers differentiated banana sections, but could not differentiate subspecies within the A genomic group. On the basis of CENH3 marker, a total of 13 haplotypes (five in both diploid and triploid, three in diploids, and rest unique to triploids) were identified from the genotypes tested. The presence of haplotypes, which were common in diploids and triploids, stipulate possibility of a shared ancestry in the genotypes involved in this study. Furthermore, the presence of multiple haplotypes in some diploid bananas indicates their being heterozygous. The haplotypes identified in this study are of importance because they can be used to check the level of homozygozity in breeding lines as well as to track segregation in progenies. 2017-10-01 2018-01-08T14:20:15Z 2018-01-08T14:20:15Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89944 en Open Access application/pdf Oxford University Press Muiruri, K.S., Britt, A., Amugune, N.O., Nguu, E., Chan, S. & Tripathi, L. (2017). Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers. Genome Biology and Evolution, 9(10), 2510-2521.
spellingShingle bananas
genotypes
phylogeny
haplotype
genetics
Muiruri, K.S.
Britt, A.
Amugune, N.O.
Nguu, E.
Chan, S.
Tripathi, L.
Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
title Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
title_full Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
title_fullStr Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
title_full_unstemmed Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
title_short Dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
title_sort dominant allele phylogeny and constitutive subgenome haplotype inference in bananas using mitochondrial and nuclear markers
topic bananas
genotypes
phylogeny
haplotype
genetics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89944
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