Ganoderma boninense is a telluric lignicolous basidiomycete and the causal agent of basal stem rot, one of the most devastating diseases of the oil palm (Elaeis guineensis). While the fight against G. boninense is of major concern in Southeast Asia, little information is available regarding the genetic diversity and evolutionary history of the fungus. In this context, the development of an informative molecular marker set to characterize the diversity of G. boninense is a key step towards understanding the biology of this pathogen. A G. boninense draft genome sequence of 63 Mbp, assembled using 454 and Illumina sequencing technology, was used to identify and develop a set of microsatellite markers (simple sequence repeats, SSRs). A total of 2487 SSRs were identified, for which 145 SSR primer pairs were designed. These SSRs are characterized by di-to hexanucleotide motifs with 5 to 34 repetitions. Ninety-seven SSR loci were successfully amplified on an initial small set of G. boninense isolates from Indonesia. A collection of 107 isolates from several regions in Southeast Asia were screened to characterize each locus for allele number, polymorphism information criterion and the presence or absence of null alleles at each locus. These results allowed us to propose an effective set of 17 SSRs for studying genetic diversity within G. boninense.
An interspecific cross (BC 1) involving a species with one of the largest genomes in the Coffea genus [ Coffea heterocalyx (HET), qDNA = 1.74 pg] and a species with a medium-sized genome [ Coffea canephora (CAN), qDNA = 1.43 pg] was studied using two types of molecular markers, AFLP and SSR. One hundred and eighty eight AFLP bands and 34 SSR primer pairs were suitable for mapping. The total map length was 1,360 cM with 190 loci distributed in 15 linkage groups. The results were compared to those obtained previously on an interspecific BC 1 progeny involving a species with a medium-sized genome ( Coffea liberica var dewevrei, DEW) and a species with one of the smallest genomes ( Coffea pseudozanguebariae, PSE). They are discussed relative to three main points: (1) the relevance of the different marker types, (2) the genomic distribution of AFLP and SSR markers, and (3) the relation between AFLP polymorphism and genome size.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.