AI Article Synopsis

  • The conservation of cultivated plants, like olive trees, in global germplasm banks is crucial for managing their genetic resources.
  • Two banks in Córdoba (Spain) and Marrakech (Morocco) have been established, with the Marrakech bank having 561 accessions from 14 Mediterranean countries.
  • Genetic analysis using microsatellites and chloroplast DNA markers revealed significant diversity, allowing the identification of three main gene pools representing the Mediterranean Basin and enabling the proposal of core accessions that capture this genetic diversity.

Article Abstract

The conservation of cultivated plants in ex-situ collections is essential for the optimal management and use of their genetic resources. For the olive tree, two world germplasm banks (OWGB) are presently established, in Córdoba (Spain) and Marrakech (Morocco). This latter was recently founded and includes 561 accessions from 14 Mediterranean countries. Using 12 nuclear microsatellites (SSRs) and three chloroplast DNA markers, this collection was characterised to examine the structure of the genetic diversity and propose a set of olive accessions encompassing the whole Mediterranean allelic diversity range. We identified 505 SSR profiles based on a total of 210 alleles. Based on these markers, the genetic diversity was similar to that of cultivars and wild olives which were previously characterised in another study indicating that OWGB Marrakech is representative of Mediterranean olive germplasm. Using a model-based Bayesian clustering method and principal components analysis, this OWGB was structured into three main gene pools corresponding to eastern, central and western parts of the Mediterranean Basin. We proposed 10 cores of 67 accessions capturing all detected alleles and 10 cores of 58 accessions capturing the 186 alleles observed more than once. In each of the 10 cores, a set of 40 accessions was identical, whereas the remaining accessions were different, indicating the need to include complementary criteria such as phenotypic adaptive and agronomic traits. Our study generated a molecular database for the entire OWGB Marrakech that may be used to optimise a strategy for the management of olive genetic resources and their use for subsequent genetic and genomic olive breeding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3247671PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10709-011-9608-7DOI Listing

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