1 / 13

Genetic and physical maps around the sex-determining M -locus of the dioecious plant asparagus

Genetic and physical maps around the sex-determining M -locus of the dioecious plant asparagus. Telgmann-Rauber et al. 2007. Background. The M -locus controls sexual dimorphism MM = supermale Mm = male mm = female In breeding male genotypes are desired Higher yield Longevity

lars
Download Presentation

Genetic and physical maps around the sex-determining M -locus of the dioecious plant asparagus

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Genetic and physical maps around the sex-determining M-locus of the dioecious plant asparagus Telgmann-Rauber et al. 2007

  2. Background • The M-locus controls sexual dimorphism • MM = supermale • Mm = male • mm = female • In breeding male genotypes are desired • Higher yield • Longevity • Markers at this locus would be useful to differentiate MM and Mm genotypes

  3. Author’s goals • Clone the region determining sex in asparagus from its position in the genome • Develop markers in this region to use in asparagus breeding programs

  4. Previous work • The M-locus was fine-mapped to the sex chromosome L5 (Reamon-Büttner et al. 1998) • 15 markers were used to construct a high density map around the M-locus (Jamsari et al. 2004)

  5. Materials and Methods • Bulked Segregant Analysis was used to develop new AFLPs • BSA uses two bulked pools of segregants differing for 1 trait, where the pools differ is likely to be the region controlling the trait • 809 F3 individuals were used for mapping • F3 individuals were created by selfing 3 andromonoecious plants in the F2 generation • 1-2% plants are andromonoecious • New markers were mapped using JoinMap

  6. Materials and Methods • Used a BAC library with 86,784 clones (5.5X coverage) • BACs were screened with 5 AFLP primer combinations • Positive clones were then aligned into contigs using FPC software • 4 BACS were partially sequenced to identify consensus sequences • Sequences were then blasted to identify putative ORFs • Also ran FISH for physical mapping

  7. Results • Found 12 novel AFLPs cosegregating with the M-locus • 11 BACs identified using 5 AFLP combos • 39 BACs identified by chromosome walking • Aligned BACS still miss the M-locus

  8. Figure 1 - Genetic and Physical Map Markers BACs

  9. Figure 2 - sequencing results 53% of hits had homology to transposons/retrotransposons

  10. FISH results Probes based off BACs were found to hybridize to centromeric and pericentromeric regions

  11. Conclusions • Created a detailed map with 26 markers spanning 8.01cM around the M-locus • Could not close the gap around the M-locus • Marker density not high enough • M-locus not evenly represented in BACs

  12. Conclusions • Recombination frequency is reduced in the M-locus region • Gene density in this region is low • The sex locus is enriched for repetitive sequences • The locus is likely to be near a cetromeric or pericentromeric region

  13. Future direction • Create more markers • Use a different BAC library • Expression profiling using subtractive hybridization/microarray technologies

More Related