DArT for high-throughput genotyping of Cassava (Manihot esculenta) and its wild relatives

Ling Xia, Kaiman Peng, Shiying Yang, Peter Wenzl, M. Carmen De Vicente, Martin Fregene, Andrzej Kilian*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

115 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Understanding the distribution of genetic diversity within and among individuals, populations, species and gene pools is crucial for the efficient management of germplasm collections. Molecular markers are playing an increasing role in germplasm characterization, yet their broad application is limited by the availability of markers, the costs and the low throughput of existing technologies. This is particularly true for crops of resource-poor farmers such as cassava, Manihot esculenta. Here we report on the development of Diversity Arrays Technology (DArT) for cassava. DArT uses microarrays to detect DNA polymorphism at several hundred genomic loci in a single assay without relying on DNA sequence information. We tested three complexity reduction methods and selected the two that generated genomic representations with the largest frequency of polymorphic clones (PstI/TaqI: 14.6%, PstI/BstNI: 17.2%) to produce large genotyping arrays. Nearly 1,000 candidate polymorphic clones were detected on the two arrays. The performance of the PstI/TaqI array was validated by typing a group of 38 accessions, 24 of them in duplicate. The average call rate was 98.1%, and the scoring reproducibility was 99.8%. DArT markers displayed fairly high polymorphism information content (PIC) values and revealed genetic relationships among the samples consistent with the information available on these samples. Our study suggests that DArT offers advantages over current technologies in terms of cost and speed of marker discovery and analysis. It can therefore be used to genotype large germplasm collections.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1092-1098
Number of pages7
JournalTheoretical And Applied Genetics
Volume110
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2005

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