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URI permanente desta comunidadehttps://thoth.dti.ufv.br/handle/123456789/3352

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Resultados da Pesquisa

Agora exibindo 1 - 3 de 3
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    Polymorphic information content of SSR markers for Coffea spp.
    (Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology, 2010) Caixeta, Eveline Teixera; Missio, Robson Fernando; Zambolim, Eunize Maciel; Zambolim, Laércio; Cruz, Cosme Damião; Sakiyama, Ney Sussumu
    Thirty-three coffee SSR primers from enriched genomic library with (GT)15 and (AGG)10 repeats were analyzed in 24 coffee tree accessions. Twenty-two primers were polymorphic among accessions; the number of alleles ranged from 2 to 13, with the mean number of 5.1 alleles per primer. PIC values ranged from 0.08 to 0.79. The highest mean PIC values were found for C. canephora (0.46), and the lowest values for C. arabica (0.22) and triploids (0.22) accessions. The polymorphic SSR markers used in this study were useful for genetic fingerprinting in the coffee tree, especially in the C. canephora and the leaf rust resistant arabica cultivars.
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    Development of microsatellite markers for identifying Brazilian Coffea arabica varieties
    (Sociedade Brasileira de Genética, 2010) Vieira, Elisa S.N.; Pinho, Édila V. de R. Von; Carvalho, Maria G.G.; Esselink, Danny G.; Vosman, Ben
    Microsatellite markers, also known as SSRs (Simple Sequence Repeats), have proved to be excellent tools for identifying variety and determining genetic relationships. A set of 127 SSR markers was used to analyze genetic similarity in twenty five Coffea arabica varieties. These were composed of nineteen commercially important Brazilians and six interspecific hybrids of Coffea arabica, Coffea canephora and Coffea liberica. The set used comprised 52 newly developed SSR markers derived from microsatellite enriched libraries, 56 designed on the basis of coffee SSR sequences available from public databases, 6 already published, and 13 universal chloroplast microsatellite markers. Only 22 were polymorphic, these detecting 2-7 alleles per marker, an average of 2.5. Based on the banding patterns generated by polymorphic SSR loci, the set of twenty-five coffee varieties were clustered into two main groups, one composed of only Brazilian varieties, and the other of interspecific hybrids, with a few Brazilians. Color mutants could not be separated. Clustering was in accordance with material genealogy thereby revealing high similarity.
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    Microsatellite DNA fingerprinting of Coffea sp. germplasm conserved in Costa Rica through singleplex and multiplex PCR
    (Crop Breeding and Applied Biotechnology, 2020) Sánchez, Elodia; Solano, William; Gatica-Arias, Andrés; Chavarría, Max; Araya-Valverde, Emanuel
    A large collection of coffee genetic resources is conserved in Costa Rica. In this study, microsatellite DNA fingerprinting of coffee through singleplex and multiplex PCR approaches coupled with capillary electrophoresis are described. To validate both methods, germplasm of Coffea spp. (Arabica and non-Arabica) and intraspecific F1 hybrids were analyzed using fourteen microsatellite markers. It was observed that through both PCR methods the fingerprinting profile of a subset of samples was identical. The genetic analyses revealed that non-Arabica coffee displayed greater genetic variation than Arabica coffee did. In addition, microsatellite analyses allowed the separation of C. arabica from other species using the principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) approach. The neighbor-joining tree clustering analysis revealed either a grouping of wild genotypes separated from cultivars of C. arabica, or a relation of intraspecific F1 hybrids with parental lines. The utility of our methodology for the characterization of F1 hybrids not previously analyzed through SSR (Simple Sequence Repeats) fingerprinting is demonstrated.