Title
Hybrid origins of cultivated potatoes
Date Issued
24 August 2010
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
University of Wisconsin
Abstract
Solanum section Petota is taxonomically difficult, partly because of interspecific hybridization at both the diploid and polyploid levels. The taxonomy of cultivated potatoes is particularly controversial. Using DNA sequence data of the waxy gene, we here infer relationships among the four species of cultivated potatoes accepted in the latest taxonomic treatment (S. ajanhuiri, S. curtilobum, S. juzepczukii and S. tuberosum, the latter divided into the Andigenum and Chilotanum Cultivar Groups). The data support prior ideas of hybrid origins of S. ajanhuiri from the S. tuberosum Andigenum Group (2x = S. stenotomum) × S. megistacrolobum; S. juzepczukii from the S. tuberosum Andigenum Group (2x = S. stenotomum) × S. acaule; and S. curtilobum from the S. tuberosum Andigenum Group (4x = S. tuberosum subsp. andigenum) × S. juzepczukii. For the tetraploid cultivar-groups of S. tuberosum, hybrid origins are suggested entirely within much more closely related species, except for two of three examined accessions of the S. tuberosum Chilotanum Group that appear to have hybridized with the wild species S. maglia. Hybrid origins of the crop/weed species S. sucrense are more difficult to support and S. vernei is not supported as a wild species progenitor of the S. tuberosum Andigenum Group. © 2010 US Government.
Start page
1187
End page
1198
Volume
121
Issue
6
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Agricultura
Genética, Herencia
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-78649635516
PubMed ID
Source
Theoretical and Applied Genetics
ISSN of the container
00405752
Sponsor(s)
This study was supported by NSF DEB 0316614 entitled PBI Solanum: a worldwide treatment ( http://www.nhm.ac.uk/researchcuration/projects/solanaceaesource/ /) to DS and by the USDA National Research Initiative Grant 2008-35300-18669 to DS.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus