Abstract
Genetic diversity and the relationship between varieties are of great importance for cotton breeding. Our work was designed to estimate the informativeness of the cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) simple sequence repeat (SSR) microsatellite locus and to estimate the genetic distance between 53 cotton cultivars as well as to select a set of SSR primers able to differentiate between the 53 cotton cultivars studied. After extracting DNA from the 53 cultivars and characterized it using 31 pairs of SSR primers we obtained a total of 66 alleles with an average of 2.13 alleles per SSR locus and values of polymorphism information content (PIC) varying from 0.18 to 0.62, the dissimilarity coefficient varying from zero to 0.41. Statistical analysis using the unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic average (UPGMA) revealed seven subgroups which were consistent with the genealogical information available for some of the cultivars. The SSR genetic profile obtained for each of the cultivars made it possible to discriminate 52 of the 53 cultivars. This study of the genetic diversity of cotton cultivars with SSR markers support the need to introduce new alleles into the gene pool of the breeding cultivars.
fingerprinting; Gossypium hirsutum L.; genealogy; molecular markers
PLANT GENETICS
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Characterization and genetic diversity analysis of cotton cultivars using microsatellites
Cândida H.C. de Magalhães BertiniI; Ivan SchusterV; Tocio SediyamaIV; Everaldo Gonçalves de BarrosI, II; Maurílio Alves MoreiraI, III
IUniversidade Federal de Viçosa Instituto de Biotecnologia Aplicada à Agropecuária, Viçosa, MG, Brazil
IIUniversidade Federal de Viçosa, Departamento de Biologia Geral, Viçosa, MG, Brazil
IIIUniversidade Federal de Viçosa, Departamento de Bioquímica e Biologia Molecular Viçosa, MG, Brazi.
IVUniversidade Federal de Viçosa, Departamento de Fitotecnia, Viçosa, MG, Brazil
VCOODETEC - Cooperativa Central de Pesquisa Agrícola, Cascavel, PR, Brazil
Send correspondence to Send correspondence to Cândida H.C. de Magalhães Bertini Rua Vicente Padilha 496, Bairro Vila União 60.410-680 Fortaleza, CE, Brazil E-mail: ch.bertini@uol.com.br.
ABSTRACT
Genetic diversity and the relationship between varieties are of great importance for cotton breeding. Our work was designed to estimate the informativeness of the cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) simple sequence repeat (SSR) microsatellite locus and to estimate the genetic distance between 53 cotton cultivars as well as to select a set of SSR primers able to differentiate between the 53 cotton cultivars studied. After extracting DNA from the 53 cultivars and characterized it using 31 pairs of SSR primers we obtained a total of 66 alleles with an average of 2.13 alleles per SSR locus and values of polymorphism information content (PIC) varying from 0.18 to 0.62, the dissimilarity coefficient varying from zero to 0.41. Statistical analysis using the unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic average (UPGMA) revealed seven subgroups which were consistent with the genealogical information available for some of the cultivars. The SSR genetic profile obtained for each of the cultivars made it possible to discriminate 52 of the 53 cultivars. This study of the genetic diversity of cotton cultivars with SSR markers support the need to introduce new alleles into the gene pool of the breeding cultivars.
Key words: fingerprinting, Gossypium hirsutum L., genealogy, molecular markers.
Introduction
Many cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) varieties have been developed from crosses between closely related ancestors but so far only limited increases in productivity have been obtained. Pressure for higher productivity in cotton farming has stimulated the search for more exotic germplasm, but although breeding methods have increased the efficiency of transferring alleles from exotic germplasm sources to cotton breeding gene pools many germplasm sources still remain underused. Van Esbroeck and Bowman (1998) have pointed out that genetic diversity ensures protection procedures against diseases and pests and thus provides a basis for future genetic gains.
Molecular markers have been widely used in genetic analyses, breeding studies and investigations of genetic diversity and the relationship between cultivated species and their wild parents because they have several advantages as compared with morphological markers, including high polymorphism and independence from effects related to environmental conditions and the physiological stage of the plant.
For research involving cotton (Gossypium hirsutum L.) the most widely used molecular method has been the random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) technique (Multani and Lyon, 1995; Tatineni et al., 1996; Iqbal et al., 1997; Lu and Myers, 2002), although allozymes (Wendel et al., 1992), restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) (Wendel and Brubaker, 1993) and amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) (Pillay and Myers, 1999; Abdalla et al., 2001) have all been used successfully in genetic diversity analyses in many species including cotton. In spite of the success of these methods the level of polymorphism detectable is low, with allozymes and RFLP markers having particularly low intra- and interspecific polymorphism, and these types of markers tend not efficient when applied to the genotyping of large germplasm collections (Liu et al., 2000a).
Simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers (microsatellites) have been successfully employed in many genetic diversity studies (Liu et al., 2000b; Gutiérrez et al., 2002) and are useful for a variety of applications in plant genetics and breeding because of their reproducibility, multiallelic nature, codominant inheritance, relative abundance and good genome coverage (Powel et al., 1996). The availability and abundance of microsatellite markers throughout the cotton genome coupled with the fact that they are polymorphic, codominant and are based on the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) make them particularly useful in genetic diversity studies of cotton (Reddy et al., 2001), with in excess of 1000 microsatellite primers having already been isolated from cotton DNA genome libraries (Nguyen et al., 2004).
Molecular studies of the genetic diversity of cultivated cotton have generally shown low genetic diversity (Brubaker and Wendel, 1994; Tatineni et al., 1996; Iqbal et al., 1997). However, more work needs to be carried out and the purpose of the work described in our present paper was to investigate the genetic diversity of cotton plants cultivated in several regions of Brazil, Argentine and Paraguay with the specific objectives of estimating the informativeness of cotton microsatellite loci and selecting a set of microsatellite primers able to differentiate between the 53 cultivars studied and to estimate the genetic distance among 53 cotton cultivars cultivated on Cone Sur.
Materials and Methods
Plant material and DNA extraction
We investigated 53 Gossypium hirsutum L. cotton cultivars developed and released by public and private institutions in Brazil, Argentine and Paraguay (Table 1). For each cultivar we extracted total DNA from ten seeds using a method based on that described by McDonald et al. (1994). The quality of the DNA was evaluated by photospectrometry using the 260/280 nm absorbance ratio method and by electrophoreses in 0.8% (w/v) agarose gel and the DNA concentration estimated at 260 nm (Sambrook et al., 1989). The stock DNA samples were stored at -20 °C and working DNA samples (containing 10 ng mL-1) at 4 °C.
Microsatellite markers and amplification conditions
To select the markers to be used for investigating our 53 cotton cultivars we screened 12 cotton cultivars using 116 BNL (made available by Research Genetics) and 86 JESPR primer pairs (Reddy et al., 2001) synthesized by Invitrogen Life Technologies as CNL primers, of which 34 BNL pairs and 1 CNL pair were polymorphic. However, only 31 primer pairs produced easily-detected products (Table 2).
Amplifications were carried out in 200 mL microtubes containing 15 mL of reaction mix consisting of 30 ng of template, 0.2 mM of each primer, 1 unit of Taq DNA polymerase, 0.2 mM of each dNTP, 0.2 to 0.3 mM of MgCl2 (Table 2) and 1X reaction buffer (10 mM Tris-HCL and 50 mM KCl, pH 8.3). The amplification was carried out in a Perkin Elmer thermocycler (Gene Amp PCR System 9600) using a touch-down program consisting of a denaturation step of 4 min at 94 °C followed by a touch-down profile starting with 10 cycles of 40 s at 94 °C, a pairing step of 40 s at 65 °C decreasing by 1 °C per cycle until 55 °C, and 1 min at 72 °C. After touch-down profiling the mixture was subjected to 30 cycles of 40 s at 94 °C, 40 s at 55 °C and 1 min at 72 °C. The program ended with one polymerization cycle at 72 °C for 7 min.
The amplified fragments were separated electrophoretically using a denaturing gel consisting of 7% (w/v) polyacrylamide (19:1 acrylamide:bisacrylamide), 32% (w/v) formamide and 5.6 M urea (Litt et al. 1993). A 10 bp DNA ladder (Life Technologies, Cat number 10821-015) was spotted on each gel as a fragment length standard. The gels were stained for 30 min using ethidium bromide (1 mg mL-1) and photographed under ultraviolet light (Eagle Eye II). Fragment length was determined visually by comparison with the DNA ladder and by using the One-Dscan program (version 1).
Data analysis
The genetic diversity of each microsatellite locus was obtained by calculating the frequency of the microsatellite allele based on polymorphism information content (PIC) using the equation:
where pij is the frequency of the jth allele for primer i (Anderson et al., 1993). The identity probability (IP) represents the probability that two cultivars are equal due to randomness and was calculated using the equation:
where pi and pj are the frequencies of alleles i and j where i ¹ j. The combined IP was obtained by multiplying the IP value for each locus.
Genetic distances between cultivars were calculated using a dissimilarity matrix constructed using the similarity index complement (SI) for co-dominant and or multiallelic variables calculated using the Genes program (Cruz, 2001). The SI estimated the similarity between genotypes for each cultivar by awarding a score to each microsatellite (i.e. 0 when an allele was absent, 1 when the allele was heterozygous and 2 when it was homozygous), the SI being calculated by dividing the total number of common alleles by the total number of alleles evaluated. Cluster analysis was carried out using tocher analysis, single linkage and complete linkage dissimilarity matrices and the unweighted pair-group method using arithmetic average (UPGMA) and the dendrogram resulting from these calculations plotted using the STATISTICA program (StatSoft Inc., 1999).
The efficiency of the cluster analysis was evaluated by the cophenetic correlation coefficient, taking into account the concordance between the original dissimilarity matrices and the dendrogram. The calculation of cophenetic correlation (rcof) was carried out using the equation:
where D represents the distances matrix and C the cophenetic matrix obtained from the dendrogram. The correlation significance level was evaluated using the Mantel Z statistic (Mantel, 1967) and the significance of Z determined using the Genes program by comparing the observed Z values with a critical Z value obtained by calculating Z for one matrix with 5000 permuted variants of the second matrix.
Results and Discussion
Microsatellite allelic diversity
For the 53 cotton cultivars evaluated we found that 31 primer pairs amplified 33 loci, with the BNL 1964 and BNL 3408 primers amplifying two loci, one of which was polymorphic. In their cotton microsatellite marker mapping study, Liu et al. (2000a) also found that some primers (including BNL 3408) amplified two loci.
The primers amplified a total of 66 alleles to give an average of 2.13 alleles per microsatellite locus (Table 2), similar to that found in cotton by Gutiérrez et al. (2002) who used 60 pairs of polymorphic primers to which amplify 69 loci resulting in a total of 139 alleles and an average of 2 alleles per locus. However, Liu et al. (2000b) used 56 polymorphic primer pairs to amplify 62 cotton loci and produce a total of 325 alleles with average of 5 alleles per locus.
The PIC value calculated to estimate the informativeness of each primer varied from 0.18 to 0.62 with an average of 0.40 (Table 2), within the range of the PIC values calculated by Liu et al. (2000b) who found that cotton PIC values varied from 0.05 to 0.82 with an average value of 0.31. The fact that our PIC values were somewhat lower than those found by Liu et al. (2000b) might be due to the fact that the cultivates used in our study came from breeding programs and might therefore have a narrow genetic base. In contrast, Liu et al. (2000b) used 97 wild G. hirsutum accessions, which might explain the higher polymorphism (5 alleles per locus) found by these authors. However, it should also be pointed out the PIC average value found by Liu et al. (2000b) was 0.31, which means that when the PIC general mean was taken into account for all loci they actually found low polymorphism. Gutiérrez et al. (2002) found an average of 2 alleles per microsatellite locus, but a large number of the cotton cultivars used came from breeding programs in the United States and Australia which are known to have a narrow genetic base (Multani and Lyon, 1995; Iqbal et al., 1997; Ulloa et al., 1999; Gutiérrez et al., 2002).
The most informative primers were BNL primers 3257, 3590, 3408, 2495 and 1694. According to maps presented by Liu et al. (2000a) and Lacape et al. (2003), 13 primer sites are located in sub-genome A, two on chromosome 5, two on chromosome 6 and two on chromosome 9, the other sites being distributed on chromosomes 2, 3, 7, 8 (A02), 10, 11 (A08) and 12. The sites for the remaining 11 primers are located in sub-genome D, two on chromosome 15, two on chromosome 20, two on chromosome 26 and the others are distributed on chromosomes 16, 17, 18, 21 (D02) and 22. The other seven primers were not mapped. This data shows that the great majority of primers used in our study were found to be well-distributed over the cotton genome.
A microsatellites profile was constructed for each cultivar using 31 primer pairs which were able to discriminate between 52 of the 53 cultivars studied (98%), the two cultivars that could not be separated being Sicala 3-2 and CNPA ITA 90. The probability that these two cultivars were equal due to randomness was calculated based on the frequency product of the alleles detected in these cultivars and was found to be very small (4.07 x 10-13 for each microsatellite locus). However, the genealogy of the plants clarifies the situation in that the Sicala 3-2 cultivar originated from a cross between the Acala and Tamcot SP-37 varieties and the DP 61 and CSIRO varieties while the CNPA ITA 90 cultivar was a selection of the Deltapine Acala (DPAc90) cultivar which was produced from a cross involving DP 16 and John Cotton Polycross cultivars. Both the DP 61 and CSIRO varieties are selections from the DP 16 cultivar while the John Cotton Polycross cultivars originated from a complex cross involving the Acala and Tamcot SP-37 varieties.
Based on the PIC values of the most informative loci it is possible to greatly reduce the number of loci employed in cultivar discrimination. Employing only the primers BNL 3257, 3590, 2495, 2921, 1694, 3408, 2960, 1053, 1423, 139 and 3255 instead of 31 primers it is possible to differentiate 52 cultivars. The 11 BNL cited above can be used to generate genetic profile definitions (genetic fingerprints) for each cultivar which should be of help in cultivar protection research, genetic purity analysis and other studies designed to be of assistance to breeding programs, such as monitoring crossing, pollen contamination rates, accuracy during controlled crossing, etc.
Genetic distance and diversity
The coefficient of dissimilarity used to calculate the genetic distance between the 53 cultivars evaluated using microsatellite loci varied from 0.00 to 0.71 with average of 0.40 ± 0.01. The distribution analysis of 1.378 pairs of the compared cultivars (Figure 1) displayed a concentration of values in the classes from 0.3-0.4 to 0.4-0.5, with a value of zero indicating similarity and values between 0.7 and 0.8 divergence. The highest genetic distance (0.71) occurred between cultivars IAC 20 and BRS Itaúba and the lowest distance (0.00) between Sicala 3-2 and CNPA ITA 90.
Multani and Lyon (1995), using RAPD markers, also been found low genetic distance values (0.01 to 0.08) between nine Australian cotton cultivars and Iqbal et al. (1997) found low genetic distances (0.18 to 0.07) between 17 G. hirsutum cultivars, also using RAPD markers. Ulloa et al. (1999) used microsatellite markers to investigate genetic distance in cotton and found that the distance between the Acala and Delta cultivars was 0.18 while that among the Pima PS series of cultivars was 0.16 and work by Gutiérrez et al. (2000) using microsatellite markers has detected narrow genetic distance between Australian and American Cultivars. Van Esbroeck et al. (1998) have pointed out that the monoculture of some successful cultivars and their extensive use as progenitors in breeding programs has limited the genetic diversity of cultivated cotton cultivars.
The threshold value for grouping samples in a dendrogram is generally empirical, but the best threshold for grouping is generally considered to be the point where there is a large distance between groups or where there is a clear nesting of taxonomic units. In our study, the dendrogram of the relationship between the 53 cultivars showed two large groups (group A at a genetic distance threshold of 50% and group B at a threshold of 35%) and seven well-nested subgroups (Figure 2).
The majority of group A cultivars were obtained by selection and are planted in the semi-arid Brazilian cerrado and have a long cropping-cycle of 140 to 180 days and about 40% final fiber percentage. The group B cultivars were produced by crossing and are recommended for planting in almost all regions of Brazil but are mainly planted in central-western and southeastern regions, the majority of group B cultivars being virus resistant and have a short cropping-cycle of about 110 to 140 days and about 38 final fiber percentage.
The seven subgroups exhibited independence between genetic clustering and cultivar characteristics such as origin, planting region and cropping-cycle. It was interesting to note that in each of the seven groups there were cultivars from several origins (Research institutes, private breeding companies), indicating that the organizations producing cultivars employ similar germplasm which is shared between them. The formation of subgroups (Figure 2) is consistent with the genealogical information obtained for some of the cultivars. Subgroup 1, for example, contains some cultivars which have CS-50, Sicala 34 and CNPA SRI5 as parents but both CS 50 and Sicala 34 cultivars have Deltapine Acala 90 and Siokra 1-1 as parents, with Siokra 1-1 in its turn having the same parents as Sicala 3-2 (Table 1). Subgroup 3 contains some cultivars which have Deltapine Acala 90 and IAC 20 as parents (Table 1), the fact that cultivar IAPAR 71 is a selection from IAC 20 may explain the presence of cultivar IPR 96 within this subgroup. Subgroup 4 contains cultivars CNPA P2 and CNPA P3 which both have the same genealogy, thus explaining the presence of these cultivars within the same group. Subgroup 5 is made up of cultivars with parents including IAC RM3, Tamcot SP-37 and IAC 17 (Table 1). Subgroup 6 contains the cultivars CD 401, Cacique, Guazuncho, Oro Blanco and IAN 338 which have parents whose genealogy shows cultivars such as Chaco 510, Guazuncho, Reba P279 and SP 8535 (Table 1). It is interesting to note that cultivar CNPA SRI5 was obtained from a population with a large base, with several cultivars being involved in its genealogy, which may explain the presence of cultivars obtained from CNPA SRI5 in various subgroups.
Although some subgroups were formed which were consistent with the genealogy of the cultivars some inconsistencies were also evident. For example, cultivars IPR 95 and IPR 96 have the same parents but they were clustered in different subgroups even though they shared 72% similarity and this also occurred with other cultivars, (e.g. BRS Facual and BRS Sucupira) which were 58% similar. The fact that cultivar CNPA SRI5 was produced as a rest of a complex cross may explain the divergence between these cultivars. Cultivars such as Epamig 5 and Alva have the same origin, presented 92% similarity and were clustered in the same group. The presence of cultivars BRS 96 and Fiber Max 986 in the same group is also inconsistent with the genealogy of these cultivars.
The lack of information about some genealogies may be a factor that led to the inconsistencies mentioned above. According to Carvalho et al. (2003) the lack of genealogy makes it difficult to estimate diversity using genealogical studies and Van Esbroeck et al. (1999) found no relationship between cotton genealogy and similarity measurements based on morphological and agronomic features. Tatineni et al. (1996) detected a 0.63 correlation between the genetic similarity of cotton lines calculated using RAPD markers and morphological features. In general, however, there is little information with respect to the correlation between cotton genetic distances based on molecular markers and genealogical studies.
In our study we observed that a large number of the cultivars studied descended from a few original cultivars (e.g. Auburn 56, Tamcot SP-37, DP Smoothleaf and DP 45) thus narrowing their genetic base and possibly making them vulnerable to the present and future diseases. In a similar way to Brazilian cultivars, cultivated upland G. hirsutum presents limited genetic diversity (Wendel et al. 1992; Wendel and Brubaker 1993; Tatineni et al. 1996; Iqbal et al. 1997). According to Iqbal et al. (2001), one hypothesis which may explain the apparent lack of diversity in cultivated upland G. hirsutum is that one or more genetic bottlenecks may have occurred during the later stages of the development of G. hirsutum latifolium, possibly as a result of rigorous selection for early maturity. Much of the original genetic diversity of G. hirsutum, including valuable alleles that confer resistance to insects, pathogens and environmental adversities, would have been lost during this phase of its domestication. Iqbal et al. (2001) also pointed out that the G. hirsutum cultivated around the world is derived from upland cottons from the USA which were exported to other countries in the 19th and early twentieth century, with most upland cotton used in early Brazilian cotton breeding coming from this source. They also observed that Pakistan cotton breeding coming from this source.
It is interesting to note that in our study we found that the majority of cultivars obtained from the different breeding programs resulted from selection programs involving previously successful cultivars or, less often, crosses between cultivars or between cultivars and lines. Van Esbroeck and Bowman (1998) have suggested some explanations to justify crosses between closely related individuals in cultivar breeding programs. These authors have argued that there is enough allelic variation, mutation or recombination in crosses between closely related individuals to allow improvement in agronomic performance and/or that the coefficient of parentage may not reflect the real genetic distance. The great number of successful cultivars obtained through reselection show that a small quantity of recombination results in sufficient genetic variance to produce genetic progress within breeding programs. Even so, great efforts are currently being made to reduce the genetic vulnerability of cultivars by introducing more diversified germplasm into cotton cultivars while avoiding negative effects on those cultivars already adapted to particular countries or regions, and will bring many rewards to the culture breeding.
Acknowledgments
The authors are most grateful to the Cooperativa Central de Pesquisa Agrícola (COODETEC), EMPRAPA, EPAMIG, IAC and IAPAR for their support in supplying the cotton seeds analyzed in the current study. This research received financial support from the Brazilian agency Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa e Desenvolvimento (CNPq)
Received: December 14, 2004; Accepted: August 25, 2005.
Associate Editor: Márcio de Castro Souza Filho
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
12 June 2006 -
Date of issue
2006
History
-
Accepted
25 Aug 2005 -
Received
14 Dec 2004