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Molecular characterization of the European rice collection in view of association mapping

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 June 2011

Brigitte Courtois*
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Raffaella Greco
Affiliation:
Parco Technologico Padano, 26900Lodi, Italy
Gianluca Bruschi
Affiliation:
Parco Technologico Padano, 26900Lodi, Italy
Julien Frouin
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Nourollah Ahmadi
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Gaëtan Droc
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Chantal Hamelin
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Manuel Ruiz
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Jean-Charles Evrard
Affiliation:
CIRAD, 34098Montpellier, France
Dimitrios Katsantonis
Affiliation:
NAGREF, 57001Thermi-Thessaloniki, Greece
Margarida Oliveira
Affiliation:
ITQB, 2784-505Oeiras, Portugal
Sonia Negrao
Affiliation:
ITQB, 2784-505Oeiras, Portugal
Stefano Cavigiolo
Affiliation:
CRA-RIS, 13100Vercelli, Italy
Elisabetta Lupotto
Affiliation:
CRA-RIS, 13100Vercelli, Italy
Pietro Piffanelli
Affiliation:
Parco Technologico Padano, 26900Lodi, Italy
*
*Corresponding author. E-mail: brigitte.courtois@cirad.fr

Abstract

In South Europe, rice is grown as an irrigated crop in river deltas where it plays an important role in soil desalinization. Specific varieties are needed for these tough conditions. We analyzed the genetic structure of a set of 305 varieties coming from the European Rice Germplasm Collection (ERGC) with 90 single nucleotide polymorphisms and compared it with a reference set representative of the diversity of Oryza sativa (mini-Germplasm Bank (GB)). These accessions had been characterized for their grain type and growth cycle duration. The polymorphism information contents of the ERGC were lower than those of the mini-GB, indicating a narrower genetic basis. Indeed, almost all ERGC accessions belong to the japonica group. Within the japonica group, both a dendrogram and a Bayesian clustering identified two major clusters. The first cluster encompassed tropical japonicas and American varieties from USA and Argentina characterized by long and narrow grains and medium to long duration. On a finer level, tropical japonicas appear separated from the other accessions. The second cluster is composed of European varieties mostly early or medium in duration and Asian temperate accessions, with a subgrouping based on grain format. A set of 200 accessions was composed for association mapping studies on traits such as salt tolerance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © NIAB 2011

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References

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