Biochemical evaluation of germplasm regeneration methods for cucumber, Cucumis sativus L.

Thumbnail Image
Date
1992
Authors
Knerr, Larry
Staub, Jack
Reitsma, Kathleen
Major Professor
Advisor
Committee Member
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Research Projects
Journal Issue
Series
Abstract

During the 1980s, the North Central Regional Plant Introduction Station replaced open-pollinated samples of Cucumis sativus with samples regenerated by cage pollination. Enzyme polymorphisms, detected by horizontal starch gel electrophoresis, were evaluated to document genetic changes in 157 Cucumis accessions resulting from changes in seed-regeneration methods. Analysis of levels of sample homozygosity indicates that cage-pollinated samples are significantly more homozygous than the open-pollinated samples they replaced, but the two groups of samples differ little in overall allelic composition. The frequency of rare alleles also has not changed significantly, although three alleles were found in cage-pollinated samples that were not noted in their older counterparts. The results of this study may not be interpreted as conclusive support for the use of cage pollination for regeneration of Cucumis germplasm collections. But the comparison of within-accession levels of homozygosity suggests that the genetic integrity of individual accessions is maintained better with cage pollination than with less-controlled regeneration methods. Only a genetic comparison of original seed samples with regenerated samples can conclusively document the effectiveness of any regeneration system.

Comments

This article is from FAO/IBPGR Plant Genetic Resources Newsletter 88/89 (1992): 1.

Description
Keywords
Citation
DOI
Source
Copyright
Collections