Title
The single Andigenum origin of Neo-Tuberosum potato materials is not supported by microsatellite and plastid marker analyses
Date Issued
01 March 2009
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
International Potato Center (CIP)
International Potato Center (CIP)
Publisher(s)
Springer Nature
Abstract
Neo-Tuberosum refers to cultivated potato adapted to long-day tuberization and a syndrome of related morphological and physiological traits, developed by intercrossing and selection of short-day adapted potatoes of the Solanum tuberosum Andigenum Group, native from the Andes of western Venezuela to northern Argentina. This re-creation of the modern potato helped support the theory of an Andigenum Group origin of potato in temperate regions and the possibility to access the largely untapped diversity of the Andigenum Group germplasm by base broadening breeding. This Neo-Tuberosum derived theory, the re-creation of the modern potato from Andigenum germplasm, has been universally accepted for almost 40 years, and has had tremendous impact in planning some breeding programs and supporting phylogenetic conclusions in cultivated potato. We show, with microsatellite (simple sequence repeat, SSR) and plastid DNA marker data, that Neo-Tuberosum germplasm is closely related to Chilotanum Group landraces from lowland south-central Chile rather than to Andigenum Group germplasm. We interpret this quite unexpected result to be caused by strong rapid selection against the original Andigenum clones after unintended hybridization with Chilotanum Group germplasm. In addition, we show that Neo-Tuberosum and Andigenum Group germplasm did not serve to broaden the overall genetic diversity of advanced potato varieties, but rather that Neo-Tuberosum lines and lines not using this germplasm are statistically identical with regard to genetic diversity as assessed by SSRs. These results question the long-standing Neo-Tuberosum derived theory and have implications in breeding programs and phylogenetic reconstructions of potato. © 2008 The Author(s).
Start page
963
End page
969
Volume
118
Issue
5
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias de las plantas, Botánica Biotecnología agrícola
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-61649123042
PubMed ID
Source
Theoretical and Applied Genetics
ISSN of the container
00405752
Sponsor(s)
The authors are grateful to Enrique Grande for verifying and updating pedigree information and Dr. Shelley Jansky for providing useful comments on a previous version of this manuscript. This research was supported by the Grant SP1C2-2004-5 from the Generation Challenge Program, the International Potato Center, and by U.S. National Science Foundation Division of Environmental Biology (NSF DEB) 0316614 entitled: a world-wide treatment of Solanum ( http://www.nhm.ac.uk/research-curation/projects/solanaceaesource// ).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus