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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/15648
Title: GENETIC DIVERSITY AND STRUCTURE ANALYSIS BASED ON HORDEIN PROTEIN POLYMORPHISM IN BARLEY LANDRACE POPULATIONS FROM JORDAN
Authors: BALOCH, ABDUL WAHID
M. ALI
BALOCH, ABDUL MAJEED
BAKHT-UN-NISA MANGAN
SONG, WEINING
Issue Date: 29-Aug-2014
Publisher: Karachi: Pakistan Botanical Society
Citation: Baloch, A. W., Ali, M., Baloch, A. M., Mangan, B. N., & Song, W. (2014). Genetic diversity and structure analysis based on hordein protein polymorphism in barley landrace populations from Jordan. Pak. J. Bot, 46(4), 1397-1402.
Abstract: Jordan is unanimously considered to be one of the centers of genetic diversity for barley, where wild and landraces of barley has been grown under different climatic conditions. The genetic diversity and genetic structure based on hordein polymorphism was assessed in 90 different accessions collected from four different sites of Jordan. A-PAGE was used to reveal hordein polymorphism among the genotypes. A total of 29 distinct bands were identified, out of them 9 bands were distinguished for D, 11 for C, and 9 for the B hordein regions. The observed genetic similarity was an exceptionally high between the populations than expected, which is probably due to high gene flow estimated between them. The genetic diversity parameters were not differ largely among the populations, indicating that local selection of a particular site did not play a key role in shaping genetic diversity. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) revealed significant population structure when accessions were structured according to population site. There was 94% of hordein variation resided within the populations and only 8% present among the populations. Both Bayesian and Principale Coordinate Analysis (PCoA) concordantly demonstrated admixture genotypes of the landraces barley populations. Consequently, none of the population found to be clustered separately according to its population site. It is concluded that this approach can be useful to explore the germplasm for genetic diversity but perhaps is not suitable for determining phylogenic relations in barley.
URI: http://142.54.178.187:9060/xmlui/handle/123456789/15648
ISSN: 2070-3368
Appears in Collections:Issue 04

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