Solanum pennellii (LA5240) backcross inbred lines (BILs) for high resolution mapping in tomato

Shai Torgeman, Tzili Pleban, Yael Goldberg, Paola Ferrante, Giuseppe Aprea, Giovanni Giuliano, Yoav Yichie, Josef Fisher, Itay Zemach, Amit Koch, Edan Rochsar, Matan Oved, Kfir Bandel, Dani Zamir*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

Wild species are an invaluable source of new traits for crop improvement. Over the years, the tomato community bred cultivated lines that carry introgressions from different species of the tomato tribe to facilitate trait discovery and mapping. The next phase in such projects is to find the genes that drive the identified phenotypes. This can be achieved by genotyping a few thousand individuals resulting in fine mapping that can potentially identify the causative gene. To couple trait discovery and fine mapping, we are presenting large, recombination-rich, Backcross Inbred Line (BIL) populations involving an unexplored accession of the wild, green-fruited species Solanum pennellii (LA5240; the ‘Lost’ Accession) with two modern tomato inbreds: LEA, determinate, and TOP, indeterminate. The LEA and TOP BILs are in BC2F6–8 generation and include 1400 and 500 lines, respectively. The BILs were genotyped with 5000 SPET markers, showing that in the euchromatic regions there was one recombinant every 17–18 Kb while in the heterochromatin a recombinant every 600–700 Kb (TOP and LEA respectively). To gain perspective on the topography of recombination we compared five independent members of the Self-pruning gene family with their respective neighboring genes; based on PCR markers, in all cases we found recombinants. Further mapping analysis of two known morphological mutations that segregated in the BILs (self-pruning and hairless) showed that the maximal delimited intervals were 73 Kb and 210 Kb, respectively, and included the known causative genes. The ‘Lost’_BILs provide a solid framework to study traits derived from a drought-tolerant wild tomato.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)595-603
Number of pages9
JournalPlant Journal
Volume119
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. The Plant Journal published by Society for Experimental Biology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Keywords

  • Backcross Inbred Lines
  • Introgression
  • Solanum pennellii
  • breeding
  • fine-mapping
  • recombination rate

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