The triploid East African Highland Banana (EAHB) genepool is genetically uniform arising from a single ancestral clone that underwent population expansion by vegetative propagation

Key message All East African Highland Banana varieties are genetically uniform having arisen from a single clone introduced to Africa. East African Highland bananas (EAHBs) are a subgroup of triploid (AAA genome) bananas of importance to food security in the Great Lakes region of Africa. Little is k...

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Veröffentlicht in:Theoretical and applied genetics 2016-03, Vol.129 (3), p.547-561
Hauptverfasser: Kitavi, Mercy, Downing, Tim, Lorenzen, Jim, Karamura, Deborah, Onyango, Margaret, Nyine, Moses, Ferguson, Morag, Spillane, Charles
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container_end_page 561
container_issue 3
container_start_page 547
container_title Theoretical and applied genetics
container_volume 129
creator Kitavi, Mercy
Downing, Tim
Lorenzen, Jim
Karamura, Deborah
Onyango, Margaret
Nyine, Moses
Ferguson, Morag
Spillane, Charles
description Key message All East African Highland Banana varieties are genetically uniform having arisen from a single clone introduced to Africa. East African Highland bananas (EAHBs) are a subgroup of triploid (AAA genome) bananas of importance to food security in the Great Lakes region of Africa. Little is known about their genetic variation, population structure and evolutionary history. Ninety phenotypically diverse EAHB cultivars were genotyped at 100 SSR microsatellite markers to investigate population genetic diversity, the correlation of genetic variability with morphological classes, and evolutionary origins since introduction to Africa. Population-level statistics were compared to those for plantain (AAB) and dessert (AAA) cultivars representing other M. acuminata subgroups. EAHBs displayed minimal genetic variation and are largely genetically uniform, irrespective of whether they were derived from the distinct Ugandan or Kenyan germplasm collections. No association was observed between EAHB genetic diversity and currently employed morphological taxonomic systems for EAHB germplasm. Population size dynamics indicated that triploid EAHBs arose as a single hybridization event, which generated a genetic bottleneck during foundation of the EAHB genepool. As EAHB triploids are sterile, subsequent asexual vegetative propagation of EAHBs allowed a recent rapid expansion in population size. This provided a basis for emergence of genetically near-isogenic somatic mutants selected across farmers and environments in East Africa over the past 2000 years since EAHBs were first introduced to the African continent.
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subjects Agriculture
Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism Analysis
Bananas
Biochemistry
Biomedical and Life Sciences
Biotechnology
Cloning
Cultivars
DNA, Plant - genetics
Evolution, Molecular
Food security
Gene Pool
Genetic diversity
Genetic Variation
Genetics, Population
Genomes
Germplasm
Hybridization
Kenya
Life Sciences
Microsatellite Repeats
Morphology
Musa
Musa - genetics
Mutation
Original Article
Plant Biochemistry
Plant Breeding/Biotechnology
Plant Genetics and Genomics
Population Density
Triploidy
Uganda
title The triploid East African Highland Banana (EAHB) genepool is genetically uniform arising from a single ancestral clone that underwent population expansion by vegetative propagation
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