2011
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2229-11-56
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Analysis of BAC-end sequences (BESs) and development of BES-SSR markers for genetic mapping and hybrid purity assessment in pigeonpea (Cajanus spp.)

Abstract: BackgroundPigeonpea [Cajanus cajan (L.) Millsp.] is an important legume crop of rainfed agriculture. Despite of concerted research efforts directed to pigeonpea improvement, stagnated productivity of pigeonpea during last several decades may be accounted to prevalence of various biotic and abiotic constraints and the situation is exacerbated by availability of inadequate genomic resources to undertake any molecular breeding programme for accelerated crop improvement. With the objective of enhancing genomic res… Show more

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Cited by 135 publications
(156 citation statements)
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References 50 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…Major allele frequency ranged from 0.34 (CcM0057) to 0.79 (CcM0402) with an average of 0.47 per marker (Table 2). Similar kinds of reports were reported by Singh et al (2008), Odeny et al (2009), Bohra et al (2011) and Indira et al (2014.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 76%
“…Major allele frequency ranged from 0.34 (CcM0057) to 0.79 (CcM0402) with an average of 0.47 per marker (Table 2). Similar kinds of reports were reported by Singh et al (2008), Odeny et al (2009), Bohra et al (2011) and Indira et al (2014.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 76%
“…Other marker systems used to estimate the polymorphism in Cajanus were RAPD (Ratnaparkhe et al, 1995), AFLP (Punguluri et al, 2006), DArT (Yang et al, 2006), SSR (Saxena et al, 2010a, b;Bohra et al, 2011a), and, recently, single-nucleotide polymorphism (Saxena et al, 2012;Roorkiwal et al, 2013). All marker-based studies have revealed that a very low level of diversity is present in cultivated pigeonpea, whereas the wild relatives of pigeonpea showed enormous diversity (Ratnaparkhe et al, 1995;Punguluri et al, 2006;Saxena et al, 2010a, b;Bohra et al, 2011a). These studies also revealed that two of the wild relatives, C. cajanifolius and C. scarabaeoides, are closely related to pigeonpea.…”
Section: Crop Pigeonpea (Cajanus Cajan L)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, development of microsatellite markers have helped in fingerprinting unique trees, assessing degree of diversity in the populations, and identifying marker tightly linked to the important agronomic traits like active ingredients, and resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses. Therefore, the development of markers has become a prerequisite for genetic studies (Bohra et al 2011;Dutta et al 2011). Keeping this in view, here, we report the development and standardization of microsatellite markers of G. gummi-gutta using next-generation sequencing (NGS) and their cross species transferability.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%