Skip to main content

Genetic diversity between two Egyptian clover varieties and QTL
analysis for some agro-morphological traits

Research Authors
Bahaa E. S. Abdel‑Fatah
Bahy Raghib Bakheit
Research Abstract

Genetic diversity between two ecotypes of Egyptian clover varieties, namely Fahl (mono-cut) and Helaly (multi-cut) have
been assessed based on forage yield and yield components as well as molecular marker systems. The two parental genotypes
were crossed to produce seeds of F1
and F2
progenies. Analyses of variance indicated significant differences between four
populations (
P1 (Fahl), P2
(Helaly), F1
and F2)
for fresh forage yield, number of florets/inflorescence, number of seeds/inflorescence
and 1000 seed weight. The mean of F1
hybrid indicated over-dominance of the higher performance. The phenotypic
and genotypic coefficients of variation were high for fresh forage yield, intermediate for 1000-seed weight and low for number
of florets/inflorescence and number of seeds/inflorescence. Four molecular marker systems with 80 primers, 30 RAPD, 10
ISSR, 10 SRAP and 30 SSR were used for studying the genetic diversity between the two parents, out of which 64 primers
(26 RAPD, 7 ISSR, 7 SRAP and 24 SSR) were polymorphic between the parents. The four molecular marker systems generated
unique DNA bands for each parent. Twenty-one primers which produced higher unique bands in both parents were
surveyed on bulked DNA from the extremes of four agro-morphological traits within and between the two ecotypes in F2
generations. Twenty-one primers produced bands distinguish between the bulked extremes for at least one trait within each
ecotype or between the two ecotypes. All polymorphic primers were subjected to QTL analysis, out of them 23 only were
mapped on three linkage groups with four agro-morphological traits and showed 24 putative QTLs

Research Department
Research Journal
Molecular Biology Reports
Research Publisher
Springer
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
Vol.46
Research Website
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11033-018-4546-4
Research Year
2019
Research Pages
pp. 897 - 908