1,278
Views
8
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Article; Agriculture and Environmental Biotechnology

Genetic diversity and genetic relationships of japonica rice varieties in Northeast Asia based on SSR markers

, , , , , & show all
Pages 230-237 | Received 22 Jul 2013, Accepted 25 Oct 2013, Published online: 16 Jun 2014
 

Abstract

Genetic diversity and the relationship among nine japonica rice groups consisting of 288 landraces and varieties in different geographical origins of Northeast Asia (China, Japan, Korea, Democratic People's Republic of Korea) and the Russian Far East district of the Russian Federation were evaluated with 154 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers. A total of 823 alleles were detected. The observed allele numbers (Na) per locus, Nei's gene diversity (He) and the polymorphism information content (PIC) ranged from 2 to 9, 0.061 to 0.869 and 0.060 to 0.856, with an average of 5.344, 0.624 and 0.586, respectively. Five SSR loci, RM1350, RM1369, RM257, RM336 and RM1374, provided the highest PIC values and are potential for exploring the genetic diversity of rice cultivars in Northeast Asia. Molecular variance analysis showed that a significant difference existed both among groups (91.6%) and within each group (8.4%). The low genetic variation within each group indicated that the gene pool is narrow and alien genetic variation should be introduced into the rice breeding program in Northeast Asia. Based on the He and PIC values, the nine groups were ranked in a descending order: Heilongjiang landraces, Jilin landraces, Japanese improved varieties, Heilongjiang improved varieties, Russian Far East district of the Russian Federation improved varieties, Liaoning improved varieties, Jilin improved varieties, Korean improved varieties and Democratic People's Republic of Korea improved varieties. The nine groups were further divided into three subgroups and the 288 varieties into five clusters. This study provided information for parent selection in order to broaden the gene pool of the japonica rice germplasm in Northeast Asia.

Acknowledgements

The authors greatly appreciate the kind help of Longzhi Han (Researcher) at the Crop Science Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences, Aihua Xin (Researcher) at Heilongjiang Provincial Academy of Agricultural Sciences and Feng Shen (Researcher) at the Liaoning Provincial Academy of Agricultural Sciences, in providing test materials.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by The National Key Technology R&D Program [grant number 2011BAD35B02-01-01].