Abstracts
The objective of this work was to characterize and quantify the genetic, molecular, and agronomic variability of hull-less barley genotypes, for the selection of parents and identification of genotypes adapted to the irrigated production system in the Brazilian Cerrado. Eighteen hull-less barley accessions were evaluated, and three covered barley accessions served as reference. The characterization was based on 157 RAPD molecular markers and ten agronomic traits. Genetic distance matrices were obtained based on molecular markers and quantitative traits. Graphic grouping and dispersion analyses were performed. Genetic, molecular, and agronomic variability was high among genotypes. Ethiopian accessions were genetically more similar, and the Brazilian ones were genetically more distant. For agronomic traits, two more consistent groupings were obtained, one with the most two-rowed materials, and the other with six-rowed materials. The more diverging materials were the two-rowed CI 13453, CN Cerrado 5, CN Cerrado 1, and CN Cerrado 2. The PI 356466, CN Cerrado 1, PI 370799, and CI 13453 genotypes show agronomic traits of interest and, as genetically different genotypes, they are indicated for crossing, in breeding programs.
Hordeum vulgare; genetic diversity; molecular markers; quantitative traits.
O objetivo deste trabalho foi caracterizar e quantificar a variabilidade genética, molecular e agronômica de genótipos de cevada-nua, para a seleção de genitores e a identificação de genótipos adaptados ao sistema de produção irrigada no bioma Cerrado. Dezoito acessos de cevada-nua foram avaliados e três acessos de grãos de cevada com casca serviram como referência. A caracterização baseou-se em 157 marcadores moleculares RAPD e dez características agronômicas. As matrizes de distância genética foram obtidas com base em marcadores moleculares e características quantitativas. Realizaram-se análises de agrupamento e dispersão gráfica dos acessos. A variabilidade genética, molecular e agronômica foi alta entre os acessos. Os acessos etíopes foram geneticamente mais similares, e os acessos brasileiros, geneticamente mais distantes. Quanto às características agronômicas, obtiveram-se dois agrupamentos mais consistentes, um com mais materiais dísticos e outro com os hexásticos. Os genótipos mais divergentes foram os dísticos CI 13453, CN Cerrado 5, CN Cerrado 1 e CN Cerrado 2. Os genótipos PI 356466, CN Cerrado 1, PI 370799 e CI 13453 apresentam características agronômicas de interesse e, como são distintos geneticamente, são indicados para cruzamentos em programas de melhoramento genético.
Hordeum vulgare; diversidade genética; marcador molecular; caracteres quantitativos.
Introduction
Hull-less barley [Hordeum vulgare (L.) var. nudum
Hook. f.] has been used for various purposes, such as human and animal feed, and for the
production of malt and food products. Barley is one of the cereals with the more
diversified genetic basis (Baik & Ullrich,
2008BAIK, B.-K.; ULLRICH, S.E. Barley for food: characteristics,
improvement, and renewed interest. Journal of Cereal Science, v.48, p.233-242, 2008.
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcs.2008.02.002.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcs.2008.02.00...
). The identification and characterization of accession variability among
barley species are essential steps for a genetic breeding program to obtain promising
genotypes which should meet the needs of a production system. Based on this knowledge,
quantitative and qualitative gains might be obtained in a more effective way during
genotype selection and evaluation through appropriate traits, for use in future parent
hybridization (Valls, 2007VALLS, J.F.M. Caracterização de recursos genéticos vegetais. In: NASS,
L.L. (Ed.). Recursos genéticos vegetais. Brasília: Embrapa Recursos Genéticos e
Biotecnologia, 2007. p.281-305.).
Several authors have studied the molecular or agronomic barley genetic variability, in
order to obtain additional information concerning existing variability in working
collections (Manjunatha et al., 2007MANJUNATHA, T.; BISHT, I.S.; BHAT, K.V.; SINGH, B.P. Genetic diversity
in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. ssp. vulgare) landraces from Uttaranchal Himalaya of
India. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, v.54, p.55-65, 2007. DOI:
10.1007/s10722-005-1884-6.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-005-1884-...
; Shakhatreh et al., 2010SHAKHATREH, Y.; HADDAD, N.; ALRABABAH, M.; GRANDO, S.; CECCARELLI, S.
Phenotypic diversity in wild barley [Hordeum vulgare L. ssp. spontaneum (C. Koch)
Thell.] accessions collected in Jordan. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, v.57,
p.131-146, 2010. DOI: 10.1007/s10722-009-9457-8.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-009-9457-...
; Amabile et al., 2013bAMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; VIEIRA, E.A.; PEIXOTO, J.R.; CAPETTINI,
F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.Genetic diversity of irrigated barley based on molecular and
quantitative data and on malting quality. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.48,
p.748-756, 2013b. DOI: 10.1590/S0100-204X2013000700007.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X201300...
). The molecular variability of hull-less
barley was quantified by Yu et al. (2002)YU, Z.; LI-QIONG, L.; HUAN, L.; JIE, B.; MAN-YE, Y.; CHEN, M.; YING-FAN,
C.; XIAO-LIN, Q.; FANG, C. RAPD markers in diversity detection and variety
identification of Tibetan hull-less barley. Plant Molecular Biology Report, v.20,
p.369-377, 2002. DOI: 10.1007/BF02772124.
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02772124...
and
Yang et al. (2010)YANG, P.; LIU, X.J.; LIU, X.C.; YANG, W.Y.; FENG, Z.Y. Diversity
analysis of the developed qingke (hull-less barley) cultivars representing different
growing regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China using sequence-related
amplified polymorphism (SRAP) markers. African Journal of Biotechnology, v.9,
p.8530-8538, 2010.. Later on, the
morphological and agronomical characterization of a set of barley accessions was made by
Monteiro (2012)MONTEIRO, V.A. Diversidade genética de acessos de cevada sob sistema de
produção irrigado no Cerrado do planalto central brasileiro. 2012. 136p. Dissertação
(Mestrado) - Universidade de Brasília, Brasília. , who included some "naked
barley" (or hull-less barley) from the germplasm bank kept by Embrapa Recursos Genéticos
e Biotecnologia. However, despite the gains obtained in a barley breeding program in the
Cerrado biome, little is known about the variability existing in germplasm banks in
Brazil (Amabile et al., 2013bAMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; VIEIRA, E.A.; PEIXOTO, J.R.; CAPETTINI,
F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.Genetic diversity of irrigated barley based on molecular and
quantitative data and on malting quality. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.48,
p.748-756, 2013b. DOI: 10.1590/S0100-204X2013000700007.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X201300...
).
Barley is generally grown in Brazilian regions with temperate climate, more frequently
in the southern part of the country for their cooler temperatures (Caierão et al., 2006CAIERÃO, E; MINELLA, E. ANTONIAZZI, N.MN 716: nova cultivar de cevada
com estabilidade de produção e qualidade cervejeira. Pesquisa Agropecuária
Brasileira, v.41, p.1063-1065, 2006. DOI:
10.1590/S0100-204X2006000600025.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X200600...
). However, the potential use of barley as an
alternative to be grown in the irrigated system in the Cerrado has been shown in
researches and developments made in the last twenty years by Embrapa Cerrados and its
partners. Barley grown in Cerrado has shown a high yield (Amabile et al., 2013aAMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; VIEIRA, E.A.; PEIXOTO, J.R.; CAPETTINI,
F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.Genetic diversity of irrigated barley based on molecular and
quantitative data and on malting quality. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.48,
p.748-756, 2013b. DOI: 10.1590/S0100-204X2013000700007.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X201300...
) and good grain classification, lack of
post-harvest dormancy, clean seed, and no fungus (Amabile et al., 2008AMABILE, R.F.; MINELLA, E.; GUERRA, A.F.; SILVA, D.B. da; ALBRECHT,
J.C.; ANTONIAZZI, N. BRS Deméter: nova cultivar de cevada cervejeira irrigada para o
Cerrado do Brasil Central. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.43, p.1247-1249, 2008.
DOI: 10.1590/S0100-204X2008000900020.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X200800...
).
The objective of this work was to characterize and quantify the genetic, molecular and agronomic variability of hull-less barley genotypes, for the selection of parents and identification of genotypes adapted to the irrigated production system in the Brazilian Cerrado.
Materials and Methods
In this study, 18 hull-less barley accessions with two and six rows, and three covered malt barley accessions from Africa, America, Asia, Europe and Oceania from the germplasm bank kept by Embrapa Recursos Genéticos e Biotecnologia (Table 1) were selected because of the number of viable seed and germination greater than 85%.
The molecular diversity analysis was performed at the Laboratório de Genética e Biologia
Molecular of Embrapa Cerrados. Leaves of two plants from each accession were collected
to extract the genomic DNA by the CTAB method according to Molinari & Crochemore (2001)MOLINARI, H.B.; CROCHEMORE, M.L. Extração de DNA genômico de Passiflora
spp. para análises PCR-RAPD. Revista Brasileira de Fruticultura, v.23, p.447-450,
2001. DOI: 10.1590/S0100-29452001000200051.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-2945200100...
. Fresh plant tissue was macerated
with a glass bar. Following this step, a buffer containing 100 µmol L-1
Tris-HCl (pH 8.3), CTAB (7%), 20 mmol L-1 EDTA and 1.4 mol L-1
NaCl was added to each sample. The samples were then incubated at 65°C for 30 min in a
water bath.
Deproteinization was performed for each sample by using 400 µL of a chloroform solution (isoamyl alcohol 24:1) resulting in an emulsion by vigorous shaking. The samples were then centrifuged at 16,060 g for 5 min, and approximately 200 µL of the supernatant were removed and placed in new 2 microliter-microtubes. Two hundred microliters of isopropanol (5°C) were added to the supernatant to carry out the DNA precipitation. The tubes were lightly agitated, then subjected to -20°C for 30 min, and centrifuged at 16,060 g for 10 min. The supernatant was removed and pellet was washed twice with 200 µL of 70% ethanol and dried at room temperature. Pellet was re-suspended in 100 µL of Milli-Q water, containing 40 µL mL-1 of RNAse. DNA amount was calculated using a spectrophotometer at 260 nm (A260) and a ratio of A260/A280, in order to evaluate its purity and quality (Sambrook et al., 1989SAMBROOK, J.; FRITSCH, E.F.; MANIATS, T. Molecular cloning: a laboratory manual. 2nd ed. New York: Cold Spring Harbor, 1989. 653p.).
Samples of each DNA accession were amplified to obtain RAPD markers. Amplifications were performed in a 13 µL total volume containing Tris-HCl 10 mmol L-1 (pH 8.3), KCl 50 mmol L-1, MgCl2 3 mmol L-1, 100 µmol L-1 of each deoxyribonucleotide (dATP, dTTP, dGTP, and dCTP), 0.4 µmol L-1 of a primer (Operon Technologies Inc., Alameda, CA, USA), a unit of Taq polymerase, and approximately 15 ng of DNA. The following primers were used: OPD03, OPD04, OPD08, OPE18, OPE20, OPF01, OPF17, OPF20, OPG01, OPG05, OPH14, OPH16, OPH17, and OPH20.
Amplifications were performed in a thermocycler programmed for 40 cycles, following the sequence: 15 s at 94ºC, 30 s at 35ºC, and 90 s at 72ºC. After 40 cycles, a final extension that lasted 6 min at 72ºC was made and, then, temperature was decreased to 4ºC. Afterwards, 3 µL of a combination of bromophenol blue (0.25%) and glycerol (60%) in water was added to each sample. Samples were loaded in agarose gel (1.2%), stained with ethidium bromide and embedded in a TBE buffer (90 mmol L-1 Tris-Borato, 1 mmol L-1 EDTA). Electrophoretic separation was performed for about 4 hours at 90 volts. At the end of the run, gels were photographed under ultraviolet light.
The generated molecular markers were converted into a binary data matrix, and genetic
distances were calculated among the different accessions, based on the coefficient of
similarity according to Nei & Li (1979NEI, M.; LI, W.H. Mathematical model for studying genetic variation in
terms of restriction endonucleases. Proceedings of the National Academy of Science of
The United States of America, v.76, p.5269-5273, 1979. DOI:
10.1073/pnas.76.10.5269.
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.76.10.5269...
) using
the Genes software (Cruz, 2007CRUZ, C.D. Programa Genes: aplicativo computacional em genética e
estatística. Viçosa: Ed. da UFV, 2007.).
The genetic similarity (GS) was calculated using Sgij = 2Nij/(Ni + Nj), in which: Nij is the number of bands present in both i and j genotypes; and Ni and Nj are the numbers of bands in i and j genotypes, respectively. Additionally, genetic dissimilarity was calculated subtracting GS of the unit (1 - GS).
Through a dendrogram, the genetic distance matrix was used to perform a cluster analysis, using UPGMA (unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic mean) for the cluster criteria (Sneath & Sokal, 1973SNEATH, P.H.A.; SOKAL, R.R. Numerical taxonomy: the principles and practice of numerical classification. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1973. 573p.), and the softwares SAS version 9.2 (SAS Institute, Cary, NC, USA) and Statistica (Statsoft, Tulsa, USA). Additionally, a dispersion plot was generated based on the principal coordinates method, and the accession stratification was performed based on spike type, continent, and country of origin.
The cophenetic correlation coefficient (r) was calculated to estimate the adjustment
between the original genetic distances of the dissimilarity matrix and the graphic
representation shown in the dendrogram, according to Sokal & Rohlf (1962)SOKAL, R.R.; ROHLF, F.J.The comparison of dendrograms by objective
methods. Taxonomy, v.11, p.30-40, 1962. DOI: 10.2307/1217208.
https://doi.org/10.2307/1217208...
, using the software NTSYS PC 2.1 (Rohlf, 2000ROHLF, F.J. NTSYS-pc: numerical taxonomy and multivariate analysis
system. Version 2.1. New York: Exeter Software, 2000. 98p.). Trait relative contribution concerning
genetic diversity was measured using Singh's method
(Singh, 1981)SINGH, D. The relative importance of characters affecting genetic
diversity. Indian Journal of Genetics and Plant Breeding, v.41, p.237-245,
1981. and the Genes software (Cruz,
2007CRUZ, C.D. Programa Genes: aplicativo computacional em genética e
estatística. Viçosa: Ed. da UFV, 2007.).
In order to evaluate agronomic traits, field experiments were carried out under irrigation via central pivot, in two different sites, from May to September 2012. The first site was the experimental field of Embrapa Cerrados, Planaltina, DF, at 15°35'30"S, 47°42'30"W, at 1,007 m altitude, using a Latossolo Vermelho distroférrico (Rhodic Haplustox), clay texture (Santos et al., 2013SANTOS, H.G. dos; JACOMINE, P.K.T.; ANJOS, L.H.C. dos; OLIVEIRA, V.A. de; LUMBRERAS, J.F.; COELHO, M.R.; ALMEIDA, J.A. de; CUNHA, T.J.F.; OLIVEIRA, J.B. de. Sistema brasileiro de classificação de solos. 3.ed. rev. ampl. Brasília: Embrapa, 2013. 353p.). The second site was the experimental field of Embrapa Produtos e Mercado, in Recanto das Emas, DF, at 15°54'53"S, 48°02'14"W, 1,254 m altitude, in a Latossolo Vermelho distroférrico típico (Rhodic Haplustox), clay texture (Santos et al., 2013SANTOS, H.G. dos; JACOMINE, P.K.T.; ANJOS, L.H.C. dos; OLIVEIRA, V.A. de; LUMBRERAS, J.F.; COELHO, M.R.; ALMEIDA, J.A. de; CUNHA, T.J.F.; OLIVEIRA, J.B. de. Sistema brasileiro de classificação de solos. 3.ed. rev. ampl. Brasília: Embrapa, 2013. 353p.).
Soil analysis results at Embrapa Cerrados, for a 10-20 cm profile, were the following: Al, 0.20 mmolc dm-3; H+Al, 15.4 mmolc dm-3; Ca, 71.5mmolc dm-3; Mg, 14.2 mmolc dm-3; P, 50.95 mg dm-3; K, 140.0 mg dm-3; and pH (water), 6.85. At Embrapa Produtos e Mercado, for a 10‒20 cm profile, the results were: Al, 0.10 mmolc dm-3; H+Al, 30.6 mmolc dm-3; Ca, 70.0 mmolc dm-3; Mg, 15.8 mmolc dm-3; P, 26.44 mg dm-3; K, 70.0 mg dm-3; and pH (water), 6.83.
A experimental randomized block design with three replicates was carried out, with a five-meter long plot, with six lines and 20 cm spacing, and a 4.8 m2 useful area for each spot with a 300 plants m-2 density.
The evaluated quantitative traits for the agronomic diversity study were: estimated
grain yield (kg ha-1); commercial classification (%) of first (class 1),
second (class 2), and third (class 3) grain classes according to Brasil (1996); thousand
seed weight (g) (Regras para análise de sementes,
2009REGRAS para análise de sementes. Brasília: Ministério da Agricultura,
Pecuária e Abastecimento, 2009. 395p.); plant height (cm); lodging (zero value for minimum or inexistent
lodging, and 100 value for maximum lodging); earing cycle (for visible silking emergence
up to 50% spikes in the useful area of the parcel) in days; HP, hectoliter grain weight
(kg hL-1) (Regras para análise de sementes,
2009REGRAS para análise de sementes. Brasília: Ministério da Agricultura,
Pecuária e Abastecimento, 2009. 395p.); and protein total content (%), using Kjeldahl´s method (Yasuhara & Nokihara, 2001YASUHARA, T.; NOKIHARA, K. High-throughput analysis of total nitrogen
content that replaces the classic Kjeldahl method. Journal of Agricultural and Food
Chemistry, v.49, p.4581-4583, 2001. DOI: 10.1021/jf010448z.
https://doi.org/10.1021/jf010448z...
).
Genetic distances among all accession pairs were estimated using the generalized
Mahalanobis distance, defined as: in which: Xi
and Xj are the mean vectors associated to i and j accessions, respectively; and
E-1 is the covariance matrix of the residuals obtained in the multivariate
analysis of variance (Bakke et al., 2008BAKKE, H.A.; LEITE, A.S. de M.; SILVA, L.B. da. Estatística
multivariada: aplicação da análise fatorial na engenharia de produção. Revista Gestão
Industrial, v.4, p.1-14, 2008. DOI: 10.3895/gi.v4i4.188.
https://doi.org/10.3895/gi.v4i4.188...
).
Cluster analyses were made based on a genetic distance matrix through a dendogram, using
the hierarchical clustering methods and UPGMA as group criteria (Sneath & Sokal, 1973SNEATH, P.H.A.; SOKAL, R.R. Numerical taxonomy: the principles and
practice of numerical classification. San Francisco: W. H. Freeman, 1973.
573p.). The dispersion plot was generated by
multidimensional scales with the principal coordinates using the SAS (SAS Institute,
Cary, NC, USA) and Statistica (Statsoft, Tulsa, USA) softwares.
Results and Discussion
After amplifying the DNA samples of hull-less and covered barley grain, 157 RAPD markers were obtained, for which 141 (89%) were polymorphic (Table 2). Starters OPD03, OPD04, OPG05, and OPH20 resulted in the greatest amount of polymorphic bands, while OPD08 resulted in the largest number of monomorphic bands (3).
Starters used to obtain RAPD markers of barley genotypes and their respective number of polymorphic and monomorphic bands.
The studied accessions showed a high genetic variability, due to the high percentage of
polymorphic bands. Such variability was expected because barley is a cereal that shows
one of the most diversified genetic basis (Baik &
Ullrich, 2008BAIK, B.-K.; ULLRICH, S.E. Barley for food: characteristics,
improvement, and renewed interest. Journal of Cereal Science, v.48, p.233-242, 2008.
DOI: 10.1016/j.jcs.2008.02.002.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcs.2008.02.00...
). Furthermore, the accessions used in the present study came
from different countries and regions around the world. Other studies identified a wide
molecular genetic variability in barley accessions (Kochieva et al., 2001KOCHIEVA, E.Z.; GORIUNOVA, S.V.; POMORTSEV, A.A. RAPD-marking of genomes
of representative Hordeum species. Genetika, v.8, p.1088-1094, 2001.; Yu et al.,
2002YU, Z.; LI-QIONG, L.; HUAN, L.; JIE, B.; MAN-YE, Y.; CHEN, M.; YING-FAN,
C.; XIAO-LIN, Q.; FANG, C. RAPD markers in diversity detection and variety
identification of Tibetan hull-less barley. Plant Molecular Biology Report, v.20,
p.369-377, 2002. DOI: 10.1007/BF02772124.
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02772124...
; Hou et al., 2005HOU, Y.-C.; YAN, Z.-H.; WEI, Y.-M.; ZHENG, Y.-L. Genetic diversity in
barley from West China based on RAPD and ISSR analysis. Barley Genetics Newsletter,
v.35, p.9-22, 2005.; Abdellaoui et al., 2007ABDELLAOUI, R.; M´HAMED, H.C.; NACEUR, M'B.B.; BETTAIEB-KAAB, L.;
HAMIDA, J.B. Morpho-physiological and molecular characterization of some Tunisian
barley ecotypes. Asian Journal of Plant Sciences, v.6, p.261-268, 2007. DOI:
10.3923/ajps.2007.261.268.
https://doi.org/10.3923/ajps.2007.261.26...
; Karim et al., 2009KARIM, K.; RAWDA, A.; HATEM, C.-M. Genetic diversity in barley genetic
diversity in local Tunisian barley based on RAPD and SSR analysis. Biological
Diversity and Conservation, v.2/1, p.27-35, 2009.; Moragues et al.,
2010MORAGUES, M.; COMADRAN, J.; WAUGH, R.; MILNE, I.; FLAVELL, A.J.;
RUSSELL, J.R. Effects of ascertainment bias and marker number on estimations of
barley diversity from high-throughput SNP genotype data. Theoretical and Applied
Genetics, v.120, p.1525-1534, 2010. DOI: 10.1007/s00122-010-1273-1.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00122-010-1273-...
; Yang et al., 2010YANG, P.; LIU, X.J.; LIU, X.C.; YANG, W.Y.; FENG, Z.Y. Diversity
analysis of the developed qingke (hull-less barley) cultivars representing different
growing regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China using sequence-related
amplified polymorphism (SRAP) markers. African Journal of Biotechnology, v.9,
p.8530-8538, 2010.; Amabile et al., 2014AMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; CAPETTINI, F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.;
PEIXOTO, J.R.; ALMEIDA, B.C. de. Genetic variability of elite barley genotypes for
Brazilian savanna irrigated systems based on RAPD markers. Bioscience Journal, v.30,
p.1118-1126, 2014. ). This reported high genetic
variability is important for improving programs, as they enable selection of contrasting
parents to originate effective crossing blocks and hybridizations, in order to increase
the possibility of success and decrease the time to collect elite cultivars.
Genetic distances among accessions based on molecular markers ranged from 0.131 to 0.484, with an amplitude of 0.353, which is greater than the one observed by Amabile et al. (2014)AMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; CAPETTINI, F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.; PEIXOTO, J.R.; ALMEIDA, B.C. de. Genetic variability of elite barley genotypes for Brazilian savanna irrigated systems based on RAPD markers. Bioscience Journal, v.30, p.1118-1126, 2014. for barley elite genotypes tested at an irrigated area of Cerrado. The lowest distance was found between accessions CI 09928, from China, and PI 370799 (0.131), from Switzerland, both six-rowed cultivars. Accessions that similarly showed to be genetically closer were the Ethiopians six-rowed PI 356474 and CI 12931 (distance = 0.135). The most contrasting genotypes were the two-rowed Romanian CI 13453 and six-rowed Indian CI 07650. Accession CI 13453 was the most divergent in relation to the others (mean distance = 0.382).
When studying the clustering through UPGMA, the dendogram resulted in a good representation of genetic distances shown in the original matrix, whose cophenetic correlation coefficient was 0.83, which is considered high and significant at 1% (r = 0.70). When the considered cutoff point was the mean distance of genotypes (0.280), three similar groups were found (Figure 1 A). The first group was composed by only one accession (CI 13453). However, most of the genotypes were assigned to the second group, and some subgroups were also identified. Six-rowed accessions PI 356474 and CI 12931 from Ethiopia, along with the six-rowed Mongolian CI 14150, showed to be the closest ones. Other six-rowed genotypes in the second group (CI 09928 from China, PI 370799 from Switzerland, PI 356466 from Ethiopia, and CI 09969 from India) were assigned to a subgroup.
Grouping analysis (A) and dispersion plots for 18 hull-less and three covered barley accessions, based on molecular genetic dissimilarities of 157 RAPD markers. Grouping by type of spike (B): ( ) six-rowed spikes. Genetic material grouping by continent of origin (C): ( ) America; ( ) Africa; ( ) Asia; ( ) Oceania, and ( ) Europe. ) two-rowed spikes, and (
No clustering was found between hull-less and covered accessions because one of the
three genotypes was significantly distant compared to the others. According to Taketa et al. (2004)TAKETA, S.; KIKUCHI, S.; AWAYAMA, T.; YAMAMOTO, S.; ICHII, M.; KAWASAKI,
S. Monophyletic origin of naked barley inferred from molecular analyses of a marker
closely linked to the naked caryopsis gene (nud). Theoretical and Applied Genetics
v.108, p.1236-1242, 2004. DOI: 10.1007/s00122-003-1560-1.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00122-003-1560-...
the trait "hull-less" is
controlled by a single recessive locus in relation to the trait "covered". Therefore,
this difference in points was not so significant compared to other differences among the
accessions, since the analysis that use RAPD markers is made with the polymorphisms
obtained in all genome.
The third group was composed of four genotypes, three of which are the two-rowed materials - CN Cerrado 5 and CN Cerrado 6 from Brazil, and the Australian witness 193011 -, and one is the six-rowed CI 09977 from Ethiopia, which was more similar to CN Cerrado 5 (Figure 1 A).
In the dispersion plot, six-rowed accessions are found more in the center of the plot, mainly the accessions CI 09928, PI370799, 164321, CI 07650, and PI 356466. In a comparison among two-rowed accessions, only CI 06640 and CN Cerrado 2 clustered, while the other ones were located more commonly in the borders of the dispersion plot (Figure 1 B).
In the dispersion of genotypes concerning the continent of origin (Figure 1 C), a wider distribution was observed for South American accessions, with genotypes located in the four quadrants of the plot.
The most contrasting accessions for variability, based on agronomic traits, were the
six-rowed CI 09459, from South Korea, and the two-rowed Brazilian covered grain 295418,
whose distance (D2) was 1,900.1. The most similar genotypes for agronomic
traits (D2 = 16.5) were the six-rowed Ethiopian CI 09976 and CI 12931.
Similarly, the accession pairs two-rowed CI 06440 (Polish) and six-rowed CI 09977
(Ethiopian), and two-rowed CI 13453 (Romanian) and CN Cerrado 4 (Brazilian) showed low
estimates of distance, for which D2 were 21.0 and 33.9, respectively. The
wide amplitude between genotypes is an evidence of the great variability in a collection
of hull-less barley used in the present study, a fundamental factor for genetic
improvement. Manjunatha et al. (2007)MANJUNATHA, T.; BISHT, I.S.; BHAT, K.V.; SINGH, B.P. Genetic diversity
in barley (Hordeum vulgare L. ssp. vulgare) landraces from Uttaranchal Himalaya of
India. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, v.54, p.55-65, 2007. DOI:
10.1007/s10722-005-1884-6.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-005-1884-...
and Shakhatreh et al. (2010)SHAKHATREH, Y.; HADDAD, N.; ALRABABAH, M.; GRANDO, S.; CECCARELLI, S.
Phenotypic diversity in wild barley [Hordeum vulgare L. ssp. spontaneum (C. Koch)
Thell.] accessions collected in Jordan. Genetic Resources and Crop Evolution, v.57,
p.131-146, 2010. DOI: 10.1007/s10722-009-9457-8.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10722-009-9457-...
have found a high
variability among covered barley collections, which are superior to the material studied
by Eshghi & Akhundova (2010)ESHGHI, R.; AKHUNDOVA, E. Inheritance of some important agronomic traits
in hull-less barley. International Journal of Agriculture and Biology, v.1, p.73-76,
2010. and Yang et al. (2010)YANG, P.; LIU, X.J.; LIU, X.C.; YANG, W.Y.; FENG, Z.Y. Diversity
analysis of the developed qingke (hull-less barley) cultivars representing different
growing regions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau in China using sequence-related
amplified polymorphism (SRAP) markers. African Journal of Biotechnology, v.9,
p.8530-8538, 2010..
Covered grain 295418 (average D2 = 942.7) showed the greatest agronomic
distance and a greater distance compared to the others. This fact can be explained by
the differences in the classification of the grain size (class 1, 82.7% and 84.0%; class
2, 14.3% and 10.7%; class 3, 3.0% and 5.3%). The genotype with the smallest mean
agronomic distance in relation to other accessions was CI 09928 from China
(D2 = 274.6). This information is important for the improvement of
hull-less barley, as it may predict better hybrid combinations between future parents,
enabling to choose accessions which shows a high adjustment, although they have more
agronomic dissimilarities, so that the traits of interest might be combined in a single
accession (Franco et al., 2001 FRANCO, M.C.; CASSINI, S.T.A.; OLIVEIRA, V.R.; TSAI, S.M.
Caracterização da diversidade genética em feijão por meio de marcadores RAPD.
Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.36, p.381-385, 2001. DOI:
10.1590/S0100-204X2001000200023.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X200100...
). However, genetic
gains that could be obtained from barley using genetically close parents should not be
ignored (Fasoula & Boerma, 2005FASOULA, V.A.; BOERMA, H.R. Divergent selection at ultra-low plant
density for seed protein and oil content within soybean cultivars. Field Crops
Research, v.91, p.217-229, 2005. DOI: 10.1016/j.fcr.2004.07.018.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.fcr.2004.07.01...
). Therefore,
when evaluating genetic distances to obtain lineages, the agronomic performance of each
accession should also be taken into consideration.
As for the importance of each agronomic trait in genetic diversity, class 1 size was the
most contributing trait 64.93% variability, followed by class 3 (9.66%), class 2
(9.65%), and the estimated grain yield (8.41%). Traits such as thousand seed weight
(3.57%), protein (1.63%), cycle (0.78%), height (0.70%), lodging degree (0.38%) and
hectoliter grain weight (0.24%) showed little contribution concerning variability. These
results were different from the outcomes reported by Amabile et al. (2013 b)AMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; VIEIRA, E.A.; PEIXOTO, J.R.; CAPETTINI,
F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.Genetic diversity of irrigated barley based on molecular and
quantitative data and on malting quality. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.48,
p.748-756, 2013b. DOI: 10.1590/S0100-204X2013000700007.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X201300...
, who found a contribution of 11.15%, for cycle, and
1.53%, for class 1.
In the dendrogram (Figure 2 A), the genotypes were assigned to three groups concerning their agronomic traits, as the cutoff point (dgE = 479.5) determined by the mean distances. In the first group, two subgroups were found, nominated as subgroup A and subgroup B. Subgroup A included accessions from five continents (5 two-rowed and 3 six-rowed materials); CN Cerrado 5 and PI 356466, with a high grain yield, were also assigned to this subgroup (Table 1). Subgroup B was mostly composed of African and European genotypes, except for CI 07650 (Chinese). Such accessions showed close values for class 1, class 2 and class 3, besides showing high values of lodging.
Grouping analysis (A) and dispersion plot of 18 hull-less and 3 covered barley accessions, based on agronomic genetic dissimilarities. Grouping based on type of spike (B): ( ) six-rowed spikes. Grouping of genetic materials by continent of origin (C): ( ) America; ( ) Africa; ( ) Asia; ( ) Oceania, and ( ) Europe. ) two-rowed spikes, and (
Based on agronomic traits, the second group was only composed by a South Korean
six-rowed accession CI 09459 which showed the lowest values of grain yield, in both
experimental fields (Table 1), and low protein
contents (15.8% and 13.8%). The third group was essentially characterized by Brazilian
genotypes (CN Cerrado 1, 2, 6, and witness 295418), except for the Ethiopian 164321.
Five genotypes that constitute this group are different because of the high values for
class 1. High values of protein shown in three of five genotypes is another fact that
has influenced the clustering. As for the accession dispersion, stratified according to
the two and six-rowed spikes (Figure 2 B), two
different groups of genotypes were found. The two-rowed materials located on the left
side of the plot showing greater distances, and the six-rowed barley genotypes located
on the right side and which were more grouped. Amabile
et al. (2013 b)AMABILE, R.F.; FALEIRO, F.G.; VIEIRA, E.A.; PEIXOTO, J.R.; CAPETTINI,
F.; RIBEIRO JÚNIOR, W.Q.Genetic diversity of irrigated barley based on molecular and
quantitative data and on malting quality. Pesquisa Agropecuária Brasileira, v.48,
p.748-756, 2013b. DOI: 10.1590/S0100-204X2013000700007.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0100-204X201300...
found the same type of grouping.
In the analysis for stratified accessions by continent of origin, Asian genotypes are
observed as grouping in the center of the plot, except for genotype CI 09459 which was
characterized as a low-grain yield genotype. Africans CI 09976, CI 12931, and PI 356474
were very close to each other; and the South American genotypes were dispersed among
themselves (Figure 2 C). Vieira et al. (2005)VIEIRA, E.A.; CARVALHO, F.I.F. de; OLIVEIRA, A.C. de; BENIN, G.; ZIMMER,
P.D.; SILVA, J.D.G. da; MARTINS, A.F.; BERTAN, I.; SILVA, G.O. da; SCHMIDT, D.A.M.
Comparação entre medidas de distância genealógica, morfológica e molecular em aveia
em experimentos com e sem a aplicação de fungicida. Bragantia, v.64, p.51-60, 2005.
DOI: 10.1590/S0006-87052005000100006.
https://doi.org/10.1590/S0006-8705200500...
has also observed that there was no grouping of
genotypes from the same origin based on agronomic traits. That might be explained by the
wide variability related to complex agronomic traits, in accessions from the same
origin, provided by the expression of a great number of genes under high environmental
effect.
Conclusions
-
There is a high genetic variability based on molecular and agronomic traits among hull-less barley accessions.
-
Barley accessions from Ethiopia are more similar, and Brazilian accessions are more genetically distant.
-
Two and six-rowed hull-less barley accessions show divergent agronomic traits.
-
Genotypes PI 356466, CN Cerrado 1, PI 370799, CI 09928 and CI 13453 show a high grain yield and, as genetically different genotypes, they are indicated for crossing in breeding programs.
Agradecimentos
À Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (Capes), pela concessão de bolsa.
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
Feb 2015
History
-
Received
27 Mar 2014 -
Accepted
12 Dec 2014