Molecular evaluation of Ethiopian sweet sorghum germplasm and their contribution to regional breeding programs
Views
0% 0
Downloads
0 0%
Open access
Citation
Tesfaye Disasa, Tileye Feyissa, Belayneh Admassu, Rajneesh Paliwal, Santie M. De Villiers, Damaris Odeny. (30/11/2016). Molecular evaluation of Ethiopian sweet sorghum germplasm and their contribution to regional breeding programs. Australian Journal of Crop Science, 10 (4), pp. 520-527.
Abstract
Sweet sorghum is an excellent feedstock for ethanol production and is also used for food and livestock feed. Germplasm collection
and characterization in sweet sorghum is a crucial step towards breeding and development of superior genotypes for various enduses.
In the present study, 13 Simple Sequence Repeat (SSR) markers were used for genotyping 175 Ethiopian sweet sorghum
accessions alongside 27 improved accessions from eastern and southern Africa. All the tested markers detected 159 alleles and a high
polymorphism information content (PIC) averaging 0.69. A comparison between Ethiopian and improved accessions revealed higher
allele numbers (124) in Ethiopian than improved accessions (92 alleles). More than half (65 out of 124) of the alleles observed in the
Ethiopian accessions were rare (<5%) and 64 were private (only present within Ethiopian accessions) while in the improved
accessions, 41% and 38% of the alleles detected were rare and private respectively. Both weighted Neighbor Joining-based clustering
and hierarchical clustering grouped the 202 accessions into three major clusters based on geographical origin. Ethiopian accessions
from the north (north Wello and south Tigray) not only clustered separately from accessions from the west central and eastern
Ethiopia, but were also distinct from most of the improved genotypes. Our results reveal an unexploited highly diverse sweet
sorghum genetic resource from Ethiopia that can be included in the regional breeding programs in order to efficiently optimize
productivity.