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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Theoretical and applied genetics 93 (1996), S. 759-764 
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Hazelnut ; Filbert ; S-locus glycoprotein ; Sporophytic self-incompatibility
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract Self-incompatibility is a genetic mechanism enforcing cross-pollination in plants. Hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.) expresses the sporophytic type of self-incompatibility, for which the molecular genetic basis is characterized only in Brassica. The hypothesis that the hazelnut genome contains homologs of Brassica self-incompatibility genes was tested. The S-locus glycoprotein gene (SLG) and the kinase-encoding domain of the S-receptor kinase (SRK) gene of B. oleracea L. were used to probe blots of genomic DNA from six genotypes of hazelnut. Weak hybridization with the SLG probe was detected for all hazelnut genotypes tested; however, no hybridization was detected with PCR-generated probes corresponding to two conserved regions of the SLG gene. One of these PCR probes included the region of SLG encoding the 11 invariant cysteine residues that are an important structural feature of all S-family genes. The present evidence suggests that hazelnut DNA hybridizing to SLG differs significantly from the Brassica gene, and that the S-genes cloned from Brassica will not be useful for exploring self-incompatibility in hazelnut.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-2242
    Keywords: Key words Hazelnut ; Filbert ; Sporophytic self-incompatibility (SSI) ; Bulked segregant analysis (BSA) ; Sequence characterized amplified regions (SCARs)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: Abstract  Random amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers were identified for self-incompatibility (SI) alleles that will allow marker-assisted selection of desired S-alleles in hazelnut (Corylus avellana L.). DNA was extracted from young leaves collected from field-planted parents and 26 progeny of the cross OSU 23.017 (S1S12)×VR6-28 (S2S26) (OSU23×VR6). Screening of 10-base oligonucleotide RAPD primers was performed using bulked segregant analysis. DNA samples from 6 trees each were pooled into four ‘bulks’, one for each of the following: S1 S2, S1 S26 , S2 S12, and S12 S26. ‘Super bulks’ of 12 trees each for S1, S2, S12, and S26 were then created for each allele by combining the appropriate bulks. The DNA from these four super bulks and from the parents was used as a template in the PCR assays. A total of 250 primers were screened, and one RAPD marker each was identified for alleles S2 (OPI07750) and S1 (OPJ141700). OPJ141700 was identified in 13 of 14 S1 individuals of the cross OSU23×VR6 used in bulking and yielded a false positive in 1 non-S1 individual. This same marker was not effective outside the original cross, identifying 4 of 5 S1 progeny in another cross, ‘Willamette’×VR6-28 (‘Will’×VR6), but yielded false positives in 4 of 9 non-S1 individuals from the cross ‘Casina’×VR6-28 (‘Cas’×VR6). OPI07750 served as an excellent marker for the S2 allele and was linked closely to this allele, identifying 12 of 13 S2 individuals in the OSU23×VR6 population with no false positives. OPI07750 was found in 4 of 4 S2 individuals from ‘Will’×VR and 7 of 7 S2 individuals of ‘Cas’×VR6 with no false positives, as well as 10 of 10 S2 individuals of the cross OSU 296.082 (S1S8)×VR8-32 (S2S26), with only 1 false positive individual out of 21 progeny. OPI07750 was also present in 5 of 5 cultivars carrying the S2 allele, with no false-positive bands in non-S2 cultivars, and correctly identified all but 2 S2 individuals in 57 additional selections in the breeding program. In the OSU23×VR6 population, the recombination rate between the marker OPJ141700 and the S1 allele was 7.6% and between the OPI07750 marker and the S2 allele was 3.8%. RAPD marker bands were excised from gels, cloned, and sequenced to enable the production of longer primers (18 or 24 bp) that were used to obtain sequence characterized amplified regions (SCARs). Both the S1 and S2 markers were successfully cloned and 18 bp primers yielded the sole OPJ141700 product, while 24-bp primers yielded OPI07750 as well as an additional smaller product (700 bp) that was not polymorphic but was present in all of the S-genotypes examined.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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