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ARS researchers have developed a relatively fast
and inexpensive way to identify genetic markers in grapes that can be linked
with specific traits such as fruit quality, environmental adaptation, and
disease and pest resistance, which can speed up breeding better grape
varieties. Click the image for more information about it.
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Bringing Better Grapes a Step Closer to
Reality
By Dennis O'Brien March 23, 2010
Grapes are one of the world's most economically important fruit crops,
but the woody perennial takes three years to go from seed to fruit, and that
makes traditional breeding expensive and time-consuming.
A team of Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) researchers has found a way to speed things up by developing
a way to identify genetic markers in the grapevine's genome that can be linked
with specific traits, such as fruit quality, environmental adaptation, and
disease and pest resistance.
Computational biologist
Doreen
Ware, geneticists
Edward
Buckler and
Charles
Simon, and research leader
Gan-Yuan
Zhong have developed a relatively fast and inexpensive way to identify
genetic markers not only in grapes, but also in other crops by using modern
sequencing approaches. Ware and Buckler work at the ARS
Robert
W. Holley Center for Agriculture and Health in Ithaca, N.Y.; Simon works at
the ARS
Plant
Genetic Resources Unit at Geneva, N.Y., and Zhong is at the ARS
Grape
Genetics Research Unit, also at Geneva.
The researchers used the technology to sequence representative
portions of the genomes from 10 cultivated grape varieties, six wild varieties
and the clone of Pinot Noir originally sequenced by scientists in 2007. They
developed filters that allowed them to make corrections for common sequencing
errors, and discovered thousands of high-quality single nucleotide
polymorphisms, or SNPS, which are genetic markers that can serve as signposts
for showing how plants are related to each other.
They then used 9,000 of those SNPs in a custom-designed assay to
examine DNA patterns at defined points along each cultivar's genome. They found
the SNPS contained enough data to identify the relationships and geographic
origins of the cultivars. The work was published in PLoS One.
Improved technology is expected to make it possible to one day
sequence the entire genomes of large numbers of grapes. But in the meantime,
the work will help researchers identify portions of the grape genome where they
can find genes that confer desirable traits, offering better information for
breeders developing new varieties. The technique also should make it easier to
identify the origins of other types of plants, characterize relationships in
other plant collections, and accelerate genetic mapping efforts in a number of
crop species.
ARS is the principal intramural scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA). The research supports the USDA priority of promoting
international food security.